F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Renamed Steam's download folder to your hard drive location

Renamed Steam's download folder to your hard drive location

Renamed Steam's download folder to your hard drive location

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RattenFanger
Member
199
08-11-2016, 10:40 AM
#21
I’ve got a solid 70/10 connection, which isn’t bad at all. However, it’s a bit of a headache to restart all those games again—reconfiguring and patching them is not something I want to do. I’ve been using a Games drive for years, moving from my original 500GB Samsung F3. Loading times are okay with me. Numerous tests indicate that very few games really improve with an SSD versus HDD. There are a couple of exceptions, like BF4 where it’s clear, but in most cases, a quicker graphics card with more or faster memory makes a bigger difference. My 980s are more than sufficient for SSD loading times. I stick to SSDs except for my Games and personal documents, which I’ve updated the User Shell paths to point to my NAS array. My HDDs have been running for a long time—over 200 days.
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RattenFanger
08-11-2016, 10:40 AM #21

I’ve got a solid 70/10 connection, which isn’t bad at all. However, it’s a bit of a headache to restart all those games again—reconfiguring and patching them is not something I want to do. I’ve been using a Games drive for years, moving from my original 500GB Samsung F3. Loading times are okay with me. Numerous tests indicate that very few games really improve with an SSD versus HDD. There are a couple of exceptions, like BF4 where it’s clear, but in most cases, a quicker graphics card with more or faster memory makes a bigger difference. My 980s are more than sufficient for SSD loading times. I stick to SSDs except for my Games and personal documents, which I’ve updated the User Shell paths to point to my NAS array. My HDDs have been running for a long time—over 200 days.

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MCtrance
Junior Member
8
08-11-2016, 05:20 PM
#22
Skyrim modifications, that's all I need to share. On ultra settings, many titles display textures loading gradually during open-world play.
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MCtrance
08-11-2016, 05:20 PM #22

Skyrim modifications, that's all I need to share. On ultra settings, many titles display textures loading gradually during open-world play.

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haydano
Member
54
08-15-2016, 10:10 PM
#23
Steam is already set up on your SSD, and you've moved some games that don't require it—like CS:GO, TF2, etc.—to your HDD. Your COD:AF, FC4, and Skyrim with mods are also on the SSD. Most applications remain on your HDD, including your B:\program files\ and B:\program files (x86).
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haydano
08-15-2016, 10:10 PM #23

Steam is already set up on your SSD, and you've moved some games that don't require it—like CS:GO, TF2, etc.—to your HDD. Your COD:AF, FC4, and Skyrim with mods are also on the SSD. Most applications remain on your HDD, including your B:\program files\ and B:\program files (x86).

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50
08-16-2016, 06:47 AM
#24
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DapperEnderman
08-16-2016, 06:47 AM #24

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Frogimouse
Member
217
08-21-2016, 11:26 PM
#25
1 ) Organize files using Mod Organizer, #1 mod program. 2 ) It varies by mod type; textures are big, gameplay changes usually involve code. My Skyrim mod folder is 27GB (just Mod Organizer plus mods, actual game elsewhere). I’ve made some texture updates and checked disk usage. Skyrim consumes a lot of SSD/HDD space—mostly read/write, not writes. It’s an older game, using under 4GB RAM and CPU; performance boost comes from 1) VRAM and 2) a fast SSD (if you intend to mod).
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Frogimouse
08-21-2016, 11:26 PM #25

1 ) Organize files using Mod Organizer, #1 mod program. 2 ) It varies by mod type; textures are big, gameplay changes usually involve code. My Skyrim mod folder is 27GB (just Mod Organizer plus mods, actual game elsewhere). I’ve made some texture updates and checked disk usage. Skyrim consumes a lot of SSD/HDD space—mostly read/write, not writes. It’s an older game, using under 4GB RAM and CPU; performance boost comes from 1) VRAM and 2) a fast SSD (if you intend to mod).

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