i wouldn't think. it can play more games now but you would likely run into a problem with low vram. i know the pro version of vmware workstation allows you to set the vram amount but this option may not be on the free version
plo346 :
Is there free multiseat software?
The free VMplayer allows for vram up to 2Gb and plays games fairly well,the biggest problem being the drive emulation where the ssds would come in,you could also do it on just one ssd but two of them would be even better.
i wouldn't think. it can play more games now but you would likely run into a problem with low vram. i know the pro version of vmware workstation allows you to set the vram amount but this option may not be on the free version
i wouldn't think. it can play more games now but you would likely run into a problem with low vram. i know the pro version of vmware workstation allows you to set the vram amount but this option may not be on the free version
is there another software I could use that would have those features?
I have 2 ssd's because the build is for 2 brothers who want to be able to split the PC up potentially in the future. Why us gaming in a vm problematic?
It seems that we missed part of the original question: For two people, using two monitors / two keyboards / two mice to play simultaneously on this to-build-rig. This probably answers "Why 2x SSD" part.
I have 2 ssd's because the build is for 2 brothers who want to be able to split the PC up potentially in the future. Why us gaming in a vm problematic?
VM's don't work like that.
A VirtualMachine is an entire PC, encapsulated in a single "file". It does not need its own dedicated drive.
Currently, I have 5 or 6 VM's available. Linux, WinServer, Windows. They can all live on a single drive.
Why is gaming in a VM problematic? The guest system in the VM will NOT play as well as in the host system.
Well, you sort of can, if you throw a LOT of money at it.
i wouldn't think. it can play more games now but you would likely run into a problem with low vram. i know the pro version of vmware workstation allows you to set the vram amount but this option may not be on the free version
plo346 :
Is there free multiseat software?
The free VMplayer allows for vram up to 2Gb and plays games fairly well,the biggest problem being the drive emulation where the ssds would come in,you could also do it on just one ssd but two of them would be even better.
Seeing as VMPlayer and VirtualBox are both free, and you already have this hardware, and you presumably already own 2 copies of the game....try it and see what happens.
My money is on that it will not work nearly as well as you desire...but try it.
See what happens.