It also has more cars, but while their quality hits higher highs than the best in-game models in Forza 4, many – indeed most – of them are vastly inferior."Įvery single car in GT5 drives more realitiscally then in F4, even offers wet,rain,night modes then in F4, with more cars on tracks, but because some of the cars in F4 looks better then SOME cars in GT5, and you can paint the cars as well, that somehow F4 is the best driving simulator? I'm slightly confused to be honest. And while the lighting and graphics in Forza 4 are outstanding, Gran Turismo 5 manages to articulate an atmosphere in its dynamic lighting and weather effects that is simply gorgeous. Brilliant though Forza 4 is, Gran Turismo 5 just feels a little more convincing at the limit, if only by a few degrees. "Which, of course, begs the question: Now that we’ve reached the end of the road for this generation of racing games, which franchise emerges the victor? Well, having played Gran Turismo 5 a lot, I feel that it still delivers the most realistic-feeling and authentic driving simulation experience. Locgically speaking, maybe if the game is being judge on it's own merit then yeah, but judging F4 against a game that even a year older offers more simulation then it will do when it releases and calling it the winner is very unfair in all honesty.īut I'm sure I'm just talking to the wind here, lol.Ĭupid_Viper_3 3763d ago (Edited 3763d ago ) You're telling that a racing game release in late 2011 can only simulate only half of such a basic natural phenomina, but is the best racing sim around? When I go to work in the morning sometimes it sunny, and on the way back home, it sometimes rain, and I have to adjust my driving accordingly. But GT still allows you to drive all those cars night,day,rain,snow, it does what it sets out to do, simulate. Reviews Knocked on GT5 because nearly 800 cars of the game doesn't look as good as the premium 200 ones,(doesn't affect the driving) but drives with the same exact physics as the premium ones. I'm just trying to make sense of the review system this gen, or maybe it's just me who needs to get with the program. Now in no way shape of form am I saying that F4 is not a great game, but how can it possibly be "The Best Racing Sim on consoles" when there are so many things it doesn't "Simulate" that GT5 does?
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However, Omega survives by regenerating, an ability he gained after absorbing the Dragon Balls. While Omega attempts to counter the wave, he receives another surprise: Goku powers up and uses his Dragon Fist attack, which seems to obliterate Omega. Out of nowhere, Goku regains his eyesight and blasts the dragon square in the chest with a Kamehameha. If it lists a number of boot options you're good to go. To see whether you're currently using UEFI boot, run sudo efibootmgr -v in a terminal. If you find an EFI directory in the ISO that's usually a good sign. It is not required for the ISO to be bootable, only an image file with the file extension of. Once again: Please note that for this to work, your computer's firmware must be UEFI compliant and the ISO must be ready for UEFI boot. The Nexcopy solution will take any ISO file and copy the data to the USB flash drive to make a true USB CD-ROM flash drive. Restart your computer and choose to boot from the USB drive.I don't know why, but GParted could still see it and the end result was still a bootable USB drive, so I guess it doesn't really matter.) Creating an ISO image from a physical disc or from a set of files is very easy to do however, through the use of a CD burning application, such as the freely available InfraRecorder or CDBurnerXP. (While testing this I couldn't mount the USB drive anymore after setting the boot flag. Notes on ISO Support: All versions of Rufus since v1.1.0 allow the creation of a bootable USB from an ISO image (.iso). In GParted, right click the partition, choose "manage flags" and then check the "boot" option. Add the 'boot' flag to the partition you've created and added the files to.Now, when you have access to both the ISO and the USB drive as filesystems in your file manager (Nautilus or whatever) just copy and paste all files in the ISO to the USB drive.Mount the ISO you wish to add to the USB drive so you can access the files in there.Mount the USB drive like you would any other external storage so you can access the filesystem on the partition you created.All UEFI compliant firmwares must support FAT12, FAT16 and FAT32, so any of these should be fine, but NTFS will not work. Format a partition on the USB drive to FAT32 using GParted.In GParted, chose "Device" and then "Create partition table.". Create a GPT partition table on your USB drive.This is what I do to create a bootable USB drive for UEFI firmware: Don't know why, but WinUSB worked so I didn't investigate further.) |
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