I got it- and I ended up returning it, because within a short time of playing the game it would all freeze. Which is frustrating as I rather liked it! However, my graphics card has a tendency to overheat and then freeze everything. So, that said, I have decided to upgrade the RAM and graphics card in hopes of a smoother VR experience and, perhaps, finally being able to run that game?
I have the original Oculus Rift and Touch. I also have an Asus Geforce GTX 970, Intel I-7 5820k CPU at 3.30 GHz, one 8 gig stick of DDR4-2400 (1200 MHz) by Crucial Tech, a system drive with a SSD 120 GB, and a secondary drive I use now for games and other programs that is a high speed SATA HD about 3 terabytes, and an external 5 terabyte drive with USB 3.0 connection. Using Windows 10 Professional- and an ASRock X99X Killer motherboard and large tower Thermaltake (very nice case, though I wish it had a build in side vent).
I have ordered an Asus Geforce GTX 1060 6GB ROG Strix OC edition VR ready, and also have 32 GB DDR4-3000 ram coming (in 8 gig sticks- the motherboard has two groups of slots that hold 4 sticks each).
Think that will smooth it out, or is the game itself just prone to crashing?
I have the original Oculus Rift and Touch. I also have an Asus Geforce GTX 970, Intel I-7 5820k CPU at 3.30 GHz, one 8 gig stick of DDR4-2400 (1200 MHz) by Crucial Tech, a system drive with a SSD 120 GB, and a secondary drive I use now for games and other programs that is a high speed SATA HD about 3 terabytes, and an external 5 terabyte drive with USB 3.0 connection. Using Windows 10 Professional- and an ASRock X99X Killer motherboard and large tower Thermaltake (very nice case, though I wish it had a build in side vent).
I have ordered an Asus Geforce GTX 1060 6GB ROG Strix OC edition VR ready, and also have 32 GB DDR4-3000 ram coming (in 8 gig sticks- the motherboard has two groups of slots that hold 4 sticks each).
Think that will smooth it out, or is the game itself just prone to crashing?