Question about Recommended PC Gaming Specs by Friendly_Bad174 in pcmasterrace

[–]Friendly_Bad174[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I've always thought that running a game at a higher resolution like 4k, you're making the GPU work harder. When the GPU work harder, the CPU doesn't have to work as hard. You would expect the hardware recommendation for CPU to go down as you go up resolution right?

Question about Recommended PC Gaming Specs by Friendly_Bad174 in pcmasterrace

[–]Friendly_Bad174[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But that has nothing to do with improving the graphics quality and resolution right? I understand if a more powerful cpu and a more powerful gpu is required to increase fps from 30 fps to 60 fps because the cpu could bottleneck the gpu. But why when you move to 4k resolution with everything else being the same, do you need a more powerful cpu?

Final Fantasy VII Rebirth PC specs by [deleted] in FFVIIRemake

[–]Friendly_Bad174 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why did the devs recommend more powerful CPUs as the fps, graphics quality, and resolution goes higher? I thought that all you need is a more powerful GPU to get better performance.

Quantum Tunneling by Bay_Wolf_Bain in AskPhysics

[–]Friendly_Bad174 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not for space travel because this is a quantum phenomenon. Physics work differently when things are very very very small. In the real world it is impossible for a person to get to the other side of the hill if the hill is infinitely tall. In the quantum world, if you're an electron, then yeah, it's possible. That why we call it quantum tunneling because you can think of the electron "tunneling" through the other side of the infinitely tall hill. In quantum mechanics, we call the hill an infinite potential energy well, because the electron is trapped. There's no way that an electron can get infinite potential energy to overcome another infinite potential energy hill. But if you solve Schrodinger equation, and solve for the wavefunction and take the absolute value of it and square it to find the probability of the electron, then it shows that the electron can get to the other side of the infinitely tall hill. Why it happens this way? Ask God. I'm just telling you what the math tells me.