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    Shadow of the Tomb Raider gets Denuvo removal boost
    With Shadow of the Tomb Raider (SOTTR) now somewhat long in the tooth, it seems to be the case that Square Enix and Crystal Dynamics are going to get out of bed with Denuvo. As Bit-Tech has reported previously, Denuvo Anti-Tamper tech comes at a price, and while it might be attractive at game launch time, the tradeoff between game sales income and anti-tamper tech-rent must now be at a pivot point. The Dark Side of Gaming noticed the removal of Denuvo from SOTTR last week and at the weekend decided to test the performance difference between the Denuvo-protected version and the recently released version with the anti-tamper tech exorcized. Many users complain about their CPU cycles being soaked up by the likes of Denuvo, though publishers typically deny any significant impact, so it is good to A/B such releases to find 'the truth'.Please note that the refreshed non-Denuvo version of the SOTTR has been 'rolled back' on Steam, but is still available in the beta build section of the store. DSOG tested both versions of the game on the following PC system specs:Intel i9 9900K processor,Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 GPU,16GB of DDR4 system RAM at 3,600Mhz,Windows 10 64-bit, using the GeForce 496.13 driver.Tests of SOTTR were run at both 1080p/Highest Settings (without Ray Tracing or DLSS), and 1080p/Lowest Settings and the built-in benchmark in the search for significance. DLSS wasn't used as in the patch notes it has been noted that it has been improved between game versions with and without Denuvo tech. No other game optimizations are noted for the sans-anti-tamper version.DSOG noticed that the biggest changes in frame rates between game versions were when the lower settings were used. In this case frame rate differences of an average of 17fps were observed. Moreover, with HT disabled, a difference of 30fps was observed.The above indicates that, yes, Denuvo will soak up your CPU cycles, impacting game performance, and those who can less afford such a hit (e.g. older processor with lower core count, no HT) will come off the worst. I have seen similar reports of the GeForce driver having an overhead, affecting lower-power PC systems. Nvidia Driver Overhead could possibly be a contributory factor here with HT off, too.
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    PrimeStation Pulsar fanless workstation PC unveiled
    PrimeStation Pulsar fanless workstation PC unveiledWritten by bit-tech news October 27, 2021 | 11:00Companies: #amd Prime Computer of Switzerland has launched the PrimeStation Pulsar PC. So far, so ordinary, but the Pulsar is one of the most powerful fanless mini-PCs on the market, and is claimed to be 100 per cent climate-neutral. The machine, described as a 'workstation' by the designers, uses its aluminium case as the heatsink, and within this hefty metal lump you will find an AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 5750G (65W).The official product highlights of the PrimeStation Pulsar are as follows:Versatile thanks to excellent connectivity Compact and full-featured PC with workstation performance and fanless design Powerful thanks to the latest 8-core, 16-thread Pro APU processor from AMD 100% climate-neutral thanks to CO2e savings and compensation Reliable and fail-safe thanks to fanless and mechanics-free design Sustainable cost reduction thanks to longer product life and lower maintenance and electricity costs Better cost planning thanks to 5-year warranty You can check out the full specs of the AMD Ryzen 7 Pro 5750G on the official pages provided by AMD, but in brief, it has 8C/16T with a base/boost of 3.8/4.6GHz, and 16MB of L3 cache. Fabricated by TSMC on 7nm FinFET, this 65W APU also boasts eight Radeon Vega GPU cores running at up to 2.0GHz.Other key specs of the system are its 8, 16, 32 or 64GB of DDR-4 3200 memory options (via two DIMM slots), 1 x NVMe and 1 x 2.5-inch SATA III ports, Intel Wireless AX200 + BT 5.2, 2.5Gbps Ethernet, HDMI 2.1 and DP 1.4 ports, as well as 3 x USB 3.2 type A, 1 x USB 3.2 type C, 1 x USB 2.0 type A, 1 x Audio USB type C, 3x audio ports. Beyond the tech specs, the physical presence of the PrimeStation Pulsar fanless workstation is rather pleasing. It has a minimal black finned finish and stands at an unassuming W: 9.1cm, H: 22.5cm, L: 20.3cm. Expect a populated system to weigh in at about 4.3kg.You can get the above mini-PC workstation for $2,179, according to Fanless Tech. Admittedly, that is quite pricey for a small APU powered system with the kind of limited upgradability a laptop might have, but it might fill your niche. Enthusiasts and DIYers may be better off with the far bulkier fanless solution The Beast from MonsterLabo - which was in the Bit-Tech news just a couple of days ago.
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    Inscryption Review
    Price: 16.79Developer: Daniel Mullins GamesPublisher: Devolver DigitalPlatform: PCIt's rare that a game grabs your attention from the starting menu, but then again, Inscryption is a rare game in so many regards. Boot up Inscryption for the first time, and after sitting through a faux-loading screen, your right index finger will be briefly baffled as you tap fruitlessly on the "New Game" button. That's because there are no new games in Inscryption. There is only the game. The one about bones and blood and ritual sacrifice. The one played against blinking eyes and withered hands that tap impatiently on the table and sometimes doother things. Instead, you must press continue, because you've already been playing for some time, and continuing is all you can do. The alternatives don't bear thinking about.Let us, then, continue. You sit on a stool in some backwoods shack, a fan of cards clutched in your trembling hand. Each card depicts a woodland animal. Across the table is a figure wreathed in shadow, who talks in a soul-shaking buzz, like Lucifer's fridge. Between you is a board on which cards are played. Guests always commence the turn, so you may play a squirrel. The squirrel is good for nothing, save as an offering for your next card. Sacrifice the squirrel, and use the blood to play the stoat. The stoat will talk to you, tell you play along. Listen to the stoat.You're now out of moves, so ring the bell. The turn will resolve and play will return to you. For this new turn you may draw one card, either from your hand, or from a deck of squirrels. Draw a squirrel and place it on the board. Now sacrifice the squirrel and stoat (who will protest) and use the two blood tokens you receive to play the Wolf.Resolve the turn again. The Wolf will attack, either at an animal played in front of it, or if there is no animal, directly at your opponent, whereupon it will deal damage. The damage is counted on a set of scales, which will rebalance as damage is exchanged. Deal enough damage to your opponent over your own damage level, and you will win, and may progress. If you lose, well, let's not dwell on what happens if you lose. You'll find out in due course.Was that a lot to take in? That's alright. Feel free to take a break. Yes, you can get up from the table, so long as you're not in the middle of a match. Stretch your legs, have a look around the cabin. Admire the crunchy pixels of the room's many objects. Fiddle with the safe in the corner. Move the hands of the cuckoo clock behind you. Leaf through the rulebook to better learn the cards in your hand. Didn't the stoat say something about the rulebook? That it might somehow help you escape this room?Why not sit back down while you think about it? Move your figurine to the next point of the map. You might get an opportunity to gain some new cards, like the ant, whose damage stacks for every ant you have in play, or the adder, whose venomous bite will instantly kill any animal in front of it. Or you might come across some much-needed supplies that provide you with one-off equipment, like squirrels in a bottle you can add to your hand at any time, or a pair of scissors you can use to cut up one of your opponent's cards.Make it through enough battles, and your opponent will reveal one of his myriad personalities. These special encounters will see you take on foes like the Prospector, who can turn your cards into useless lumps of gold. Getting through these battles will test your deck-handling skills to the limit. But you should feel good about you progress. Few ever make it this far.Victory in these encounters may taste sweet. But the flavour is fleeting. We're not done yet, not even close. There's much more for you to discover. Perhaps you prefer to build you army from bones, an alternate type of resource that increases whenever one of your animals is killed. Or maybe you'll make use of the stone altars found throughout the wilderness, sacrificing one animal to give its power to another. Or perhaps you'll become a pelt dealer, gathering these inert cards from the trapper, and facing your opponent with a deck full of useless skins until you can sell them to the Trader for extra-powerful cards.Down and down the rabbit hole goes, it's warren spreading out from the board into the cabin itself. The two are inextricably linked, you see. The board will lead you to clues in the world, which will lead you to more powerful cards, which lead you back to the board. With every new clue your power increases, to the point where you can create unstoppable cards that verge on game breaking. Indeed, if there is an oversight on your opponent's part, it's that he puts too much potential power in your hand, the game running away from him once you pass a certain point.But you don't mind too much, do you? Admit it, you like it here. You like those blinking eyes across the table. You like the dreadful atmosphere, the palpable threat of consequences if you lose. You like the feel of the blood and the bones as they slide through your fingertips, the cards that chatter and argue and complain as you play them. You find it thrilling, perhaps even a little amusing. Your hands, they don't shake through fear, but through excitement.So why not pull up your stool, and have another round of this twisted little game? Bask in its dark tones and delve into its deep and ever-shifting decks. I'll be there with you, lurking in the darkness. There is, after all, nothing else quite like it.
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    Intel Core i9-12900K claimed to be the "World's Best Gaming Processor"
    Intel Core i9-12900K claimed to be the "World's Best Gaming Processor"Written by bit-tech news October 28, 2021 | 11:00Companies: #intel Intel launched its first six Alder Lake-S processors on Wednesday evening. The SKUs forming the initial roaster of 12th gen Intel Core processors can be found detailed below in a table. Briefly, they are the Intel Core i9-12900K/KF, the Intel Core i7-12700K/KF, and the Intel Core i5-12600K/KF. From the suffixes, seasoned Bit-Tech-ies will know these are all multiplier unlocked CPUs for enthusiasts, with the 'KF' chips sold with iGPUs that have been rendered incommunicado. Highlights of the first 'Intel 7' process product launch were basically the things we were left wanting after the Intel Architecture Day back in August specific launch SKU information, a smattering of benchmarks, and some input from Intel partners regarding the first 600-series motherboards, and DDR5 RAM kits. We have all that now, but Intel won't let third-party reviews be published until CPUs and PCs are available to the public, starting from 4th November.Above you can see all the new SKUs. You can see the mix of P- and E-cores, base, and turbo frequencies, as well as caches and so on. Important new stuff in this table includes the Processor Base Power and Maximum Turbo Power. You can disregard the smaller wattage figure, as all the enthusiast motherboards will be running the new CPUs at the higher power limit shown to make the most of their potential.Considering the top-end Intel Core i9-12900K to get a handle on the potential of these 12th gen Core processor offerings, Intel says that this chip is the "worlds best gaming processor". It features 16 cores and 24 threads and runs at up to 5.2GHz but in your high-end cooler packing rig it will be scoffing over 240W when under heavy loads.At the event yesterday evening, Intel showed some of its own test results, demonstrated "leadership gaming". You can see the chart it shared directly above, which suggests that the Intel i9-12900K is about 12 per cent faster than the AMD Ryzen 9 5950X in modern PC gaming. Sadly, it appears to be the case that Intel's Windows 11 systems haven't been updated with the AMD/Microsoft patches to get AMD's L3 caching and 'preferred core technology' working as it should. Remember that these issues could slow gaming on AMD platforms by as much as 15 per cent.Intel claimed better advances in content creation vs its own previous gen flagship CPUs. In these processor intensive use cases, the 12th gen CPUs were at least a third faster than their 11th gen ancestors. Of course, the greater core counts, and creative multicore loving apps will have been instrumental in these uplifts.For your interest, I've embedded a comparison Intel i9-12900K die shot below, as shared by Der8auer. You can also check out some fancy wafer and die shots courtesy of HardwareLuxx editor Andreas Schilling on Twitter. Word on the street is that the flagship Core i9-12900K will be priced at US$590, the Core i7-12700K will be $410, and the Core i5-12600K will be $290.Intel introduced the all-new 600 Series chipsets alongside the new processors. For the enthusiast level desktop processors, it has aptly allowed partners like Asus, Gigabyte, and MSI to launch motherboards based around the Z690 chipset. The new motherboards provide advanced and modern I/O technologies such as PCIe 5.0, DDR5 (usually), fast integrated wired and wireless networking, and more, as standard.Oodles of new motherboards have been revealed, for example Asus alone has nineteen Z690 models spanning all sorts of capabilities and sizes (E-ATX, ATX, mATX and mini-ITX) prepared. The likes of Aorus, and G.Skill are boasting about their new DDR5 memory modules, too.
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    The end
    THE FORUMS ARE STAYING OPEN. WE HAVE NO PLANS TO SHUT THEM DOWN OR MIGRATE YOUR DATA TO A NEW SYSTEM. ANY FUTURE PUBLICATION MENTIONED BELOW ARE NOT PART OF THE MEDIA TEAM, HEXUS OR BIT-TECH. ANY TALK OF A NEW PUBLICATION IS NOT RELATED TO US.For me, rather like you guys, bit-tech.net has been a huge part of my life. I have loved every moment and mod particularly the Call of Duty Nvidia ammo case, and the reviews have been funny, clever and informative.But now, it is time to go out on a high and say goodbye.The community has made every story published worthwhile you guys are smart, assertive tech-lovers who love great tech and are brilliantly vocal about bad tech!The contributors and reviewers have been awesome too and worked tirelessly to ensure that quality critiques and builds have been delivered to you to enjoy and learn about never kowtowing to brands but always respectfully examining the techs purpose.Thanks to all the brands which have supported bit-tech on this journey they did this because the community rocks I thank each and every one of them.The forums and website will remain hosted ad free going forward for the community to continue being great as usual.And now, thats it. Its goodbye from me and goodbye from bit-tech.
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