• Thorry@feddit.org
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    2 months ago

    Half Life 2 was released over 20 years ago. It was meant to run on what is now regarded as ancient hardware.

    When Half Life 2 released there was actually a whole lot of grumbling from gamers as the system requirements were very high. It ran like shit or didn’t ran at all unless you had very recent and high end hardware.

    I remember buying a new gpu back then specifically because of HL2. I didn’t have a lot of money, so I bought an Asus 6800 card, which wasn’t powerful enough to run HL2. However with a bit of luck those could be modded and overclocked into an 6800 Ultra which was powerful enough. However it was a lottery whether this was possible and ran without issues. The first card I bought couldn’t do it, so I went to the shop and returned it. Went to another shop and bought one there, which also didn’t work. Then I went over to another town and bought one there which finally worked out. Even though it was a mid-tier card, gpus were expensive back then so it cost me all of the money I’d saved up for a couple of years before.

    HL2 has gotten a lot of optimizations as the years went on, but when it first released it was an example of an unoptimized game when released. And just like these days people were bitching about it.

    • Agent Karyo@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 months ago

      From what I remember while HL2 was demanding it was relatively well optimized at release. That being said, I would have been fine with 30-40 FPS back then.

    • InFerNo@lemmy.ml
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      2 months ago

      What I recall was HL2 being a lot easier on the resources compares to Doom 3, which it was competing with. It sparked a community project called DOOM3 CAN DO IT TOO, where they tried to show open areas and water physics. Doom3 itself, being on Mars and using narrow corridors got the reputation that it rendered narrow scenes and got away with being badly optimized. Later, Quake Wars definitely proved the engine was capable of large open spaces (sporting Carmack’s Megatexture technology).

    • Venat0r@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      It’s just the law of diminishing returns at play: with each successive improvement in graphics technology, the number of players who’d rather turn the graphics settings down than buy new hardware increases .