I still have a few months of play before I officially start preparing for the exam, and I hope I can finish what I have to do as soon as possible. But I have a problem with whether I can play this game——
What equipment should I choose to play SP?
OK, I now have two smartphones, but one of them was used by relatives, and the other one was confiscated until the end of the exam. The HUAWEI Mate9 can carry about 1,000 pieces of work, but I can't use it. I 've also considered buying a new phone, the xiaomi redmi 6A, but I can't buy it for financial reasons.
I have two laptops, one HP Presario V3000 and one Acer E1 471G, but the former is too old, the latter needs repair and lacks power cord. Of course, I'm also considering buying new laptops, such as Asus, but that's not until after my exams. I 've tried to run SP on HP, but very Carton, I'm going to try to fix Acer this weekend to support my use in the next few months. (I don't know if it can bring other games such as War Thunder)
Still got ta talk about desktops. I have an Asus desktop computer that can run 1,500 parts, but it's in storage and the home network is not good, so I'm not going to use it. And desktop computers are not easy to carry with a laptop, network cards need to be connected and run loud, so it is easy for my parents to find(I usually start at night)
U can build a pc with all silent part, so ur parents can't find u
PC and get the game on steam.
If you already have a laptop and a phone, I'd personally get a PC.
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I say get one. To actually build one yourself is a good option. Buy all the solid state parts used (from sources you can trust obviously) and anything with mechanical components as new (HDDs and optical disk drives).
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I built my brother a good low end dual monitor gaming pc for under £300 (on hardware) on that premise. The build included a GT1030 and two HP 22cw monitors, and an Intel i5-3550 (I had to cut corners somewhere and I knew he wasn't going to be doing much video editing, etc.).
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The best part about a custom built PC is that you don't really upgrade the unit as a whole. Just the parts inside. For example, your laptop will eventually begin showing it's age as the parts get older... on a PC, you just throw out a old part when it starts showing its age and plug in a new one... The only original part that remains from my PC is the SSD.
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Obviously it might not be a route you want to go down. but I think it's at least worth considering. Sure, you can't exactly carry it around, but it's a good investment in the long run.
pc master race
get a pc