syscocyr 3 Posted August 25, 2012 (edited) Would this run arma on high with no lag while recording with fraps if you cant see after bullet holes pm me ill pm you the set upCPU: Intel® Core™ i7-3770K 3.50 GHz 8MB Intel Smart Cache LGA1155 (All Venom OC Certified)HDD: 2TB (2TBx1) SATA-III 6.0Gb/s 64MB Cache 7200RPM HDD (Single Drive)MEMORY: 8GB (4GBx2) DDR3/1600MHz Dual Channel Memory (Corsair or Major Brand)MOTHERBOARD: [CrossFireX] ASUS P8Z77-V LX Intel Z77 Chipset DDR3 ATX Mainboard w/ IRST, Lucid Virtu MVP, 7.1 HD Audio, GbLAN, 2x PCIe x16 (1 Gen3, 1 Gen2), 2x PCIe x1 & 3 PCI (Extreme OC Certified)SOUND: HIGH DEFINITION ON-BOARD 7.1 AUDIOVIDEO: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 560 Ti 2GB 16X PCIe Video Card (Major Brand Powered by NVIDIAIf some one could build a pc for me on like ibuypower or something tht will run arma on high or veryhigh while fraps is recording tht would be awesome Edited August 25, 2012 by syscocyr Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
TheOnlyRipper 2 Posted August 25, 2012 You should buy a SSD but it should work with these specs. But I cannot say it to a 100. I by myself have the same system besides the i7, mine is a i5 760 clocked to 3.57 GhZ nad my GTX 560Ti has only 1 gb and I can run the game smoothly on very high specs but only can record on halfsize . Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
seepra 9 Posted August 25, 2012 (edited) That CPU is definitely enough for ArmA II/DayZ, and GPU is good to go too. As advised above, you might want an SSD drive for your Windows 7 installation, or at least a separate hard drive for the video stream FRAPS is going to be saving constantly. If the game and FRAPS are going to be reading/writing off the same HDD, it might bog it down a bit. But framerate-wise I'm quite sure that should work provided you have a freshly restarted server, or server running off powerful hardware. Slow server will slow your FPS down in many cases no matter how good CPU/GPU or connection you have (my GTX460 runs very high and very low at same FPS on weak servers).I'm sure you would be able to do least 720p gaming/recording resolution, and very high graphics. I personally wouldn't shoot at 1080p because YouTube seems to compress it an awful lot no matter what codec and bitrate you use, but I might be wrong, and that rig most likely would do it at 1080p anyway, but for reliability and constant framerate without drops I'd personally do 720p, and save on space/editing/rendering time too! :P Edited August 25, 2012 by seepra Share this post Link to post Share on other sites