System Requirements

BugsSport

Chieftain
Joined
Sep 27, 2006
Messages
1
Hey everyone,
Does anyone know whether 386 RAM is enough to run Civilization 4 if I have an ATI x1600Pro with 512 RAM and twelve pixel pipelines, 1.8Ghz Processor?
Thanks-BugsSport

---Do you remember that picture of Atlas holding up the world? What's he standing on?---
 
Im no expert but 386mb of ram sounds like a little. Your video card and processor are up to the job though. You'll probalby be able to run it but you'll get some serious slow down as the game progress. Luckely ram is one of the easiest things to upgrade on a pc. I recomend that you buy two 512mb ram chips and thus uprading your pc ram to 1024mb ram. Then you'll be able to run Civ4 very smoothly.

One more thing, are you sure that your pc ram is 386mb? Never heard of that specific amount of ram before. Its usally 206, 512, 1024 or 2048.
Try posting your Dxdiag...
 
no no no - get more ram - a 512 block should help - the memory on your videocard is less important.
 
Im not much of a pc savvy but I think what I have is an MX440 8X (128mb) on a 1gig RAM. Graphics seemed pretty average compared to what I'm seeing on the screenshots here. Whatkind of upgrade should I buy/do???
 
If you opt to upgrade than buy a new PC:

First, go upgrade your CPU, afterthat increase your system memory. If you have some money left, go buy some latest video card you can afford.

I see a lot performance when I upgrade CPU than video card. I upgrade both, and now I am waiting for memory card price to going down.

Regards,
Arto.
 
Artosoft said:
First, go upgrade your CPU, afterthat increase your system memory. If you have some money left, go buy some latest video card you can afford.

One catch regarding CPU upgrade is, that your CPU must not be too old, otherwise its socket has been replaced by newer version. An example, my almost 3 year old $2000 Dell computer, features a 2.4GHz Pentium 4 - a good cpu at that time. It uses socket 768 (i think). All modern Intel CPU's uses LGA 775 or something. That means, if I want to upgrade my CPU, I also need to upgrade my motherboard. This can easily require replacement of memory (DDR=old) and videocard (AGP 4x=also old) since new motherboard have DDR2 memory sockets and pci-express slots for video... Heck, maybe the powersupply also needs replacement. So whats left? - A DVD drive and a disabled floppy drive... Yes, I COULD buy a slightly faster Pentium 4 with the same old socket, but its MORE expensive than a brand new and MUCH faster Core 2 Duo - so thats really not tempting.

My conclusion, after spending a lot of time on how I can improve the civ4 experince on my computer, is that I cannot - not for a resonable price. A complete replacement of the PC, and letting the kids having the "old" Dell seems like a better idea - but I just can't justify that, cause Civ4 is the only thing requiring it...
 
netbjarne said:
One catch regarding CPU upgrade is, that your CPU must not be too old, otherwise its socket has been replaced by newer version. An example, my almost 3 year old $2000 Dell computer, features a 2.4GHz Pentium 4 - a good cpu at that time. It uses socket 768 (i think). All modern Intel CPU's uses LGA 775 or something. That means, if I want to upgrade my CPU, I also need to upgrade my motherboard. This can easily require replacement of memory (DDR=old) and videocard (AGP 4x=also old) since new motherboard have DDR2 memory sockets and pci-express slots for video... Heck, maybe the powersupply also needs replacement. So whats left? - A DVD drive and a disabled floppy drive... Yes, I COULD buy a slightly faster Pentium 4 with the same old socket, but its MORE expensive than a brand new and MUCH faster Core 2 Duo - so thats really not tempting.

My conclusion, after spending a lot of time on how I can improve the civ4 experince on my computer, is that I cannot - not for a resonable price. A complete replacement of the PC, and letting the kids having the "old" Dell seems like a better idea - but I just can't justify that, cause Civ4 is the only thing requiring it...
True.

Now I am stuck with 2.8GHz Intel Northwood CPU (upgrade from 2.4GHz Intel Northwood CPU). Buy it at around USD105 from tray (no box). I can't find 3.06GHz, so the second best is 2.8GHz. At least I can keep my PC for one or two years.

My next upgrade will be total upgrade, since I need new motherboard, new CPU (dual cores or 4 cores?), new PCI-E graphic card (if no new standard in 1 or 2 years), new memory type (currently on DDR), new PSU as well. So my sff casing will retire. My next casing should be one of those silent casing one.

Regards,
Arto.
 
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