No, dual-core games are still popular and widely played today.
No, dual-core games are still popular and widely played today.
I've noticed Dragon Age Inquisition and Far Cry 4 lack dual-core support, which may limit the capabilities of the budget processor "Pentium K" for newer titles. Is this signaling the end of dual cores without hyper-threading? For Dragon Age Inquisition, the recommended setup includes Windows 7 or 8.1 with a 64-bit CPU, either an AMD quad-core at 2.5 GHz or an Intel quad-core at 2.0 GHz. Far Cry 4 requires Windows 7 SP1 or 8/8.1 (64-bit only), an Intel Core i5-750 at 2.6 GHz or an AMD Phenom II X4 955 at 3.2 GHz.
You can play FC4 on the Pentium G3258 with this injector or something there is a guide on the forum
You wonder what you're hoping for. It looks like you're feeling quite self-centered.
to advance the sector and create superior experiences with advanced systems
Requirements are increasing, yet it's acceptable for a game to launch even if it's built to avoid running on hardware with less than the specified needs (such as COD shosting refusing systems with under 6GB RAM). Let it begin and let the user decide if it works.