No, no picture exists that can achieve 60 in that scenario.
No, no picture exists that can achieve 60 in that scenario.
Running on a laptop with an i7 2720Q and HD 3000, watching a TNT explosion create a slideshow at 1 frame every few minutes feels intense. To run Minecraft smoothly at 60 FPS with a massive TNT explosion in the background, you'd need a powerful setup—likely several high-end GPUs or a dedicated gaming rig.
It's frustrating because Minecraft is single-threaded and CPU-intensive, so even with high XP and a decent processor, you won't see any frames.
You'd require a G3258 module, mount it on an LN2 line, and set the oscillator to 6GHz.
Acquire a finely detailed G3258 and an Ek Predator 360 with tailored water cooling. Boost its speed to 5 GHz and above, and enhance the internal graphics to a minimum of 1.67 GHz (up from the standard 1.1 GHz).
I applied it on my Minecraft server with a powerful Xeon that rivals an i7 4770K in speed, but it still crashed. The game runs extremely slow even on a modern machine. I also tested it on my desktop using a Core i5 4690k and GTX 950, where the FPS dropped to near zero with the GPU idle and CPU at high levels.