Recommended Posts

I was always very fond of the attunement chains and rep grinds. It kind of goes against what Blizzard wanted in terms of progression though. In TBC, the attunements forced progression through earlier content. They wanted a complete 360 in LK. I would love to see it come back though.

lol

For some casters spirt = hit, and when you need 1742 hit to be capped that healer gear starts looking pretty damn good. Roughly half of my 'best in slot' gear is healer loot.

I expect the same is true for warlocks and moonkin. Enhancement shaman apparently get something out of using caster weapons right now too.

The first tier of gear has some pretty rough itemization so sometimes even if a stat is useless to you (like spirit to mages) healer gear might still be an upgrade to the alternatives.

I ran every heroic and the first 4 raid bosses with a group average of 325 -- we couldn't even use the random dungeon finder to get in to heroics. You don't need gear, you need experience. Right now ilevel is sort of a proxy measure of experience. If someone is at 350-something you know they've been raiding, if they're at 340-something they've been doing heroics, and 330-something they've been into normal mode dungeons.

That almost works right now but it'll start to fall apart very quickly. "Welfair epics" are just around the corner. Right now it's PVP blues (you can honor cap yourself in < 5 minutes with the new tol barad changes) but it'll expand fairly quickly as more crafted gear become available, as people start selling conquest points, valor points, and raid epics trickle down, and lose 10-games arena/battleground teams collect points, etc.

IMO some sort of attunement chain for heroics similar to magister's terrace would be a good place to start. Maybe bring back some element of the TBC rep grinds where you had to run normal mode dungeons a couple of times before you could go to the heroic version. That's annoying as hell for alts, but this early in the expansion it's not going to be a big deal.

Thought they said they're making sure enhance shamans are to made to avoid caster weapons?

We want to make sure Enhancement shaman avoid caster weapons.

Thought they said they're making sure enhance shamans are to made to avoid caster weapons?

They want to, but they haven't yet -- just like mastery is still worthless for unholy DKs and ret paladins. They should be looking for melee 1-handers now, but until that stuff is changed they'll be playing the game we've got now.

That almost works right now but it'll start to fall apart very quickly. "Welfair epics" are just around the corner. Right now it's PVP blues (you can honor cap yourself in < 5 minutes with the new tol barad changes) but it'll expand fairly quickly as more crafted gear become available, as people start selling conquest points, valor points, and raid epics trickle down, and lose 10-games arena/battleground teams collect points, etc.

you don't get points for losses in arena or rated bg's.

but right now you can cap weekly point with 5 2 man wins and get an epic for your first 3 weeks.

we'll have to see how that evolves though. some of the higher cost items such as the pvp weapons are going to be very grindy or multiple weeks to get, depending on how the point cap/points per rating works.

i haven't tried tol borad but maybe i'll try and queue up for it tonight if it gives killer honour. won't stay that way for long though given how grindy bg's are even if you do win.

i also have repair bills(although small) after doing only pvp. kind of annoying since you don't get ANY money from pvp to make up for it. something like 3g per night.

IMO some sort of attunement chain for heroics similar to magister's terrace would be a good place to start. Maybe bring back some element of the TBC rep grinds where you had to run normal mode dungeons a couple of times before you could go to the heroic version. That's annoying as hell for alts, but this early in the expansion it's not going to be a big deal.

Aye, I liked the Attunements. Especially for the raids too, like having to be Attuned for Kara and such.

Anyone got any advice for a 17 year old who's been playing with games and computers since he was 3 who wants to start playing Wow< but has Super slow internet, and a piece of junk computer?

depends on how slow your internet is. and how old/low end your computer is. you might be able to run wow on low settings and solo world quest decently.i guess it also depends on your class but i don't have any good suggestions for that.

might want to stay out of the more well populated cities like org or stormwind too.

Aye, I liked the Attunements. Especially for the raids too, like having to be Attuned for Kara and such.

i always disliked attunments and have met alot of people who found them annoying. never were as bad as l2 attunements for certain raids where the quest chain took about a week of 8 hour play sessions including the part where you had to grind a certain mob spawn that was hard to get to with normal melee(auto) attacks only that reliably procced your quest item after almost exactly 8 hours of doing so.

lol damn, wow is srs bzns. People like you that get so worked up over a game is a major +1 why i started to think i wanted to leave the game.

Dayum people like you with comments like that in THIS forum are hypocrites. I never said not once I was getting worked up, I am disgusted and appalled but certainly not worked up and certainly not loosing any sleep over it. I simply commented on my observations and gave a reaction. Maybe wow would be better if people like you leave I can imagine you being quite the keyboard warrior trying to act cool saying stuff like "wow is srs bzns" to other people in trade chat or whatever.

Didn't really want to take the topic down this avenue but just want to get some responses.

You pay a subscription for something, in this case a game you must obviously take it serious enough to pay it, if not you could just get pokemon for the Gameboy and play that. Even if you are playing the game for "fun" or to "pass time" be casual or whatever one still has to pay a subscription, I do not think people will part with their money if they were not serious about getting some form of enjoyment/entertainment from it.

i have two options for computers to run it on. my mostly clearable Dell Dimension 2350 Desktop which is hooked up to my HD Flatscreen as a monitor, or mt brand new laptop with a 500 Gig external hard drive.

depending on which computer i use i'll eithe rbe stuck with an old 56k Dial up that runs at 26.0 Kb/s at it's BEST or i will have to play solo unless i go to a friends house where he has fast internet without a bandwidth limit.

My laptop is an Acer Aspire One D255 Series running Windows 7 Starter. and the external hard drive is a Seagate 500 gig Free Agent

any suggestions?

you don't get points for losses in arena or rated bg's.

but right now you can cap weekly point with 5 2 man wins and get an epic for your first 3 weeks.

"10-game teams" was the derogatory name for teams made by people that didn't intend to compete. No matter how bad you are, the system will eventually find someone just as bad and you'll trade 5 games to each other and get your points. In TBC that meant raiders /dancing in the middle of the arena for their weapons, now you have to try a little more. Even then: keyboard turning fire standards will get their arena gear with 30 minutes of effort each week.

i haven't tried tol borad but maybe i'll try and queue up for it tonight if it gives killer honour. won't stay that way for long though given how grindy bg's are even if you do win.

Change went in yesterday. If you're attacking and win you get 1800 honor, if you're defending and win you get 180 honor. The new norm is for the defenders to try and lose as quickly as possible so that they'll get to attack in 2 hours.

You just have to be in the zone, not even queued for battle (which means hanging out on the bridge right before the end will get you honor points).

Desktop:

OS: Windows XP Home Edition Service Package 2

Intel Celeron CPU 1.70 GHz

as far as sound or graphics cards, i'm not certain. it was used when i bought it.

Netbook:

OS: Windows 7 Starter

Intel Atom N450 CPU

Graphics Card: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator for mobile.

i used a small hack to use a bit of virtual memory to give it 2000 to 3000 RAM

"10-game teams" was the derogatory name for teams made by people that didn't intend to compete. No matter how bad you are, the system will eventually find someone just as bad and you'll trade 5 games to each other and get your points. In TBC that meant raiders /dancing in the middle of the arena for their weapons, now you have to try a little more. Even then: keyboard turning fire standards will get their arena gear with 30 minutes of effort each week.

Change went in yesterday. If you're attacking and win you get 1800 honor, if you're defending and win you get 180 honor. The new norm is for the defenders to try and lose as quickly as possible so that they'll get to attack in 2 hours.

You just have to be in the zone, not even queued for battle (which means hanging out on the bridge right before the end will get you honor points).

even if you try and get the minimum effort it'll be grindier than actually trying in arenas now. you'll just feed teams like mine whoa re just coming back to wow but not at the top of their game but still lose lots of matches. it'll be a lot of queues befor eyou get a team to trade wins with.

but yeah i know about the 10 match teams. i basically became one of those people in tbc becuase my teams just we'ren mtoivated to improve and practice and get better, and in some cases even log in on our arena day for our ten losses that week. well we didn't lose every match. and no i don't really blame mages being gimpy at the time or our terrible comp. we just didn't have it in us. i wasn't a great arena leader and my team didn't listen to my directions or feedback anyway. we couldn't focus fire properly let lone spike or interupt/cc healers.

i'll have to look at tol borad, that being said horde pvpers are just awful in my BG/server so i won't be surprised if alliance wins everytime.

still depending on how long the battles take it could be faster honour from losing than the average bg. especially given how many 20 minute ctf bg's i've had this week.

Desktop:

OS: Windows XP Home Edition Service Package 2

Intel Celeron CPU 1.70 GHz

as far as sound or graphics cards, i'm not certain. it was used when i bought it.

Netbook:

OS: Windows 7 Starter

Intel Atom N450 CPU

Graphics Card: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator for mobile.

i used a small hack to use a bit of virtual memory to give it 2000 to 3000 RAM

desktop MIGHT run it at min settings.

netbook idunno. if you upgraded hte actual ram to 2gb it might run it at min settings, but i have doubts. i have the same cpu on my netbook and have thought about trying to install wow for lul even though with that small of screen it would be next to unplayable. PS virtual memory isn't even in the same league as actual ram.

but again, wow isn't going to be playable on less than isdn .5mbps down 256k up.

i always disliked attunments and have met alot of people who found them annoying. never were as bad as l2 attunements for certain raids where the quest chain took about a week of 8 hour play sessions including the part where you had to grind a certain mob spawn that was hard to get to with normal melee(auto) attacks only that reliably procced your quest item after almost exactly 8 hours of doing so.

I'm not arguing for the old style attunement chains. Karazhan was "good" - fun, something you could pug, and generally not ****-blocked by strange requirements. I felt the same way about onyxia apart from chasing Rexar around Desolace for 45 minutes it was a pretty good chain. I'm looking for "Run the place on normal mode with some sort of a minor quest chain entirely in the zone" and then some kind of ****-block mechanism that makes you go back on normal mode once or twice before they let you into heroic.

Anything beyond that is garbage. I don't mind them for optional perks (IE: doing an attunement chain gets you access to a trinket or ring that is better than say Tier N-1, but worse that current teir drops) but nothing mandatory. The teleport/shadow resist necklace and class trinkets from black temple were good rewards for doing the attunement chain for Black Temple after it was dropped as a requirement.

SSC/TK attunement? Trash. Black Temple/Hyjal? Absolute garbage. The game was miles better when those requirements were removed.

i'll have to look at tol borad, that being said horde pvpers are just awful in my BG/server so i won't be surprised if alliance wins everytime.

still depending on how long the battles take it could be faster honour from losing than the average bg. especially given how many 20 minute ctf bg's i've had this week.

They should be taking less than 5 minutes for 1800 honor if your'e attacking. The defenders are being paid to lose.

use i'll eithe rbe stuck with an old 56k Dial up that runs at 26.0 Kb/s at it's BEST or i will have to play solo unless i go to a friends house where he has fast internet without a bandwidth limit.

I just throttled my connection down to 26kbit/s (from 25mbit) -- the game is unplayable. Latency is too high to even use the auction house or interact with vendors, questing and killing mobs would probably be impossible and any sort of group play is right out of the question.

Also, even if you go and buy the latest version of the game right now, you're going to have gigabytes of patches. The last minor patch (4.0.3 -> 4.0.3a) was close to 500 megabytes. These patches are not optional so you're talking about days of downloading just for a minor update.

yeah i agree with you on attunments.

an old mmo buddy quit wow forever due to some vanilla raid attunement. said he'd had enough of that **** and was never coming back. which was too bad because he was a great guy to hang out with in vent.

i don't recal minding kara attunment too much. i sitll have the lolzy epic it gives in my bank. i knew lots of guilds on my old rp server that banged their heads on it for ever though. my pvp guild failed at clearing it quickly in arena epics after i gquit.

i think something of a lead up quest chain that give some peice of gear relevant to that raid dungeon rather than some kind of "attunement" required to do it would be best. something ebtter than what you're going in with but not as good as what drops there.

anyways, i think i'm going to try tol borad tonight. i'll let you know how it goes.

okay then, looks like i have a few more things to upgrade around here. i'll see what i can do. of course, i'm sure i can find a beter graphics card somewhere. and if nothing els, i'll save up for a few terabyte external hard drive.

make a thread in hardware hangout asking for advice with teh specs you gave me here.

include your budget and time spans.

and DO NOT install games to external hard drives. omg lolz. seriously don't.

include what game syou want to play and the specs of your monitor.

i think if you have a budget of at least say $400-600 or more we can help you build a computer capable of playing wow on decent graphical settings. depending on where you live.

otherwise i'd also look at upgrading your internet. you can get fairly cheap packages with enough speed and bandwidth to play wow and browse and do email and watch youtube. again depending on where you live.

Anyone got any advice for a 17 year old who's been playing with games and computers since he was 3 who wants to start playing Wow< but has Super slow internet, and a piece of junk computer?

I played from Afghanistan on a slow satellite connection with a laptop that had a geforce 7800 mobile card, so it's possible.

well i can confirm that tol borad gives nothing at all for losing. but at least it went fast.

EDIT: no i did it wrong. i found ht ebridge on the next go around, but only 5 of us got in. :no:

anyways did week 2 of 2s tonight and overall we did a lot better. my bro improved his leading and target calling and we both did a better hjob of communicating working together focus firing.

we also got lucky with getting matched against teams where one person failed to load, though one of them was a badass lock who almost took me down despite being outnumbered.

burned a dk down befor ei even knew what was happening in one match. was barely ramping up.

overall used my spells particularly new cata and wotlk spells like mirror images much much better this time around. time warp seems awesome to open with along side the fireball pet thing as i was getting 1.4s frostbolts.

ended the session with a new epic cape which was a very nice upgrade and now up to around 1k resilience for 11% damage reduction.

this is wow loading up on my ssd. does this seem right to you evn? (in advance sorry about ht ecrackle, you may want to turn it down, though it's not too loud)

seems kinda slow, what kind of drive did you get?

Some controllers are apparently really slow (jmicron, indlix(?)) some are really fast (intel, sandforce). Yours looks like it's about half as fast as mine.

Some of that is addons - you've got carbonite i think, and probably a few more than me but that shouldn't make it that slow.

Mine's a RAID-0 set of SSDs but IMO the performance between the raid and single SSD wasn't noticable at all.

Do you have AHCI turned on for your SSD drive? that makes a huge difference. I don't know what it does, but some nerds at school practically crapped on my head when I told them I wasn't using it.

Do you have AHCI turned on for your SSD drive? that makes a huge difference. I don't know what it does, but some nerds at school practically crapped on my head when I told them I wasn't using it.

http://benchmarkreviews.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=505&Itemid=38

I still don't know what it does, maybe you'll have better luck understanding.

http://benchmarkrevi...d=505&Itemid=38

I still don't know what it does, maybe you'll have better luck understanding.

The primary thing it does is enable NCQ so if your SSD supports NCQ you should see a noticeable difference, even if it doesn't AHCI is still the way to go as it is the native operating mode of the controller, using the IDE legacy mode just introduces a compatibility layer.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Posts

    • Speak for yourself. I saw it on Feedly, came here to read it, and did read it until the steps to activate. I skipped them to read the last paragraph. I knew it was probably not "the most requested feature", but knowing Neowin, I knew the article was going to talk about a feature nonetheless. I've seen Neowin in its best and worst.
    • See if this article I wrote the other day works for you.
    • We could disable web results as far back as Windows 10 everywhere.
    • No, it wasn't "huge", it is lame, and it was lame back then.
    • 7 Days: SPECS for $2,195, Firefox Nova 2026, first AI arts museum, and iPhone price hike by Aditya Tiwari 7 Days is a weekly roundup of picks of what's been happening in the world of technology - written with a dash of humor, a hint of exasperation, and an endless supply of (black) coffee. This week's highlights include Linux 7.1 stable release, Samsung pulling the plug on its VPN, and Microsoft Edge bringing the sign-in with Google experience. Let's get started. You can check out the recent issues of the 7 Days weekly roundup. Mozilla highlights Firefox Nova Mozilla showed off a new Firefox roadmap highlighting the browser's upcoming features and the Nova 2026 redesign. Interested users and enthusiasts can check out what's cooking and share feedback on the upcoming additions. Besides this, Firefox 152 brought Tab Groups to Android as one of its biggest additions, along with a redesigned Settings experience. World's first AI arts museum Image: Google Google opened the world's first AI arts museum in Los Angeles on June 20, which it named Dataland. The museum, spanning 25,000 square feet, was built in collaboration with media artist Refik Anadol, who has worked with Google since 2016. It will have real-time visuals and react dynamically to visitors. Salesforce shopping bag In the latest acquisition news, Salesforce is buying the customer support software company Fin (formerly Intercom) for $3.6 billion to strengthen its AI customer service ambitions and Agentforce platform. The transaction is expected to close in the fourth quarter of its fiscal year 2027. UK follows Australia Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced that the country will ban social media for kids under 16, which is happening after a six-week trial involving 300 teenagers, stating that social media is making them unhappy and easier for bullies to harass and abuse them. Starmer continued that social media is addictive and uses an infinite scroll designed to lock users in for hours. The UK government plans to take action on gaming services and livestreaming platforms. Meanwhile, its age verification rules have also become a hot topic and a point of criticism. Our Features Our coffee-powered team publishes a platter of editorials, opinion posts, and guides. Check them out: Microsoft hides these secret Windows 11 performance boost settings available on every PC Microsoft Paint used to be my favorite Windows app as a kid, and it's still pretty good Why you need to take back control of your synced passwords and how to go about doing that The Microsoft Office feature that time forgot This week in software news Catch up on some of the latest software news updates that arrived throughout the week: Another Samsung shutdown: The South Korean giant is pulling the plug on the Samsung Max VPN app, which is used by more than 50 million users. The app has stopped working since June 15, and Samsung didn't provide a reason for the unexpected move. Photoshop power-up: The popular image editing app is getting a big 20% performance boost on x86-64 (AMD64) systems and a 13% bump-up on Arm devices. Here, the credit goes to a new performance boost added to Windows 11 following a combined effort between Microsoft and Adobe. Linux 7.1 arrives: Linus Torvalds released the stable Linux 7.1 kernel this week, which brings critical driver updates and a rewritten storage driver. You should look out for the new NTFS driver, Intel FRED for improved performance on Panther Lake and future CPUs. Ads in your games: Electronic Arts is launching a new advertising platform to serve in-game ads and enable brands to feature their products in titles like EA Sports FC, Madden, NHL, Skate, or The Sims. With EA Advertising, brands will be able to inject their products into games in real-time via dynamic placement, in places like stadium signage in sports games. Sign in with Google: Microsoft Edge browser is finally getting direct Google account sign-in support from the profile menu and the Edge sign-in screen, allowing users to sync browser data without an MSA. Rufus 4.15 beta: The latest Rufus update is out with important fixes for "silent" Windows 11 installation, patches for ARM-based PCs, and more. Rufus 4.15 beta is now available to download from its official GitHub repository. NVIDIA 610.62: GeForce hardware owners can get their hands on the new WHQL-certified 610.62 Game Ready driver, which carries a lot of bug fixes and support for the fast-paced 6v6 movement shooter Empulse. Zed 1.7.2: The latest update adds "/compact" AI chat summarization, new models, settings kill management, git graph commands, and UI improvements. This week in hardware news Image: Snap Inc. Catch up on some of the latest software news updates that arrived throughout the week: SPECS for $2,195: Snap Inc. launched its new AR-powered wearable computer. SPECS are now available for pre-order and will start shipping in the US, UK, and France later this year. No CMF phone in 2026: The global memory shortage has also knocked Nothing's door and it has decided to hold the launch of CMF Phone 2 Pro's successor this year. That said, Nothing still has planned several new products under the CMF brand. 12th Gen Surface Pro: It's been two years since the original pair of Copilot+ PCs arrived. Now, Microsoft upgraded the lineup with Snapdragon X2-based devices for the 12th-gen Surface Pro, which promises up to 53% faster graphics. New Surface Laptop: The refreshed Surface Laptop is also powered by the Snapdragon X2 Plus and X2 Elite, offering up to 58% faster graphics performance, 80 TOPS Neural Processing Units (NPUs), and up to 20 hours of battery life. HONOR Robot Phone: The Chinese smartphone maker demoed its mobile photography capabilities by capturing its first cinematic video using the Robot Phone concept, which features a 3-axis, 4DoF gimbal that extends from the phone's body for stable recording and real-time subject tracking. Snapdragon Reality Elite Platform: Qualcomm's new platform is a massive leap forward for mixed reality and spatial computing devices. It can power both all-in-one video-see-through headsets and lightweight, tethered optical-see-through glasses, offering better visuals, improved power efficiency, and deeper on-device AI integration compared to the previous generation. Galaxy XR: Samsung's extended-reality handset arrived in the UK months after its launch. It's available for pre-order now and will go on sale on July 8. The hardware remains unchanged, but Samsung has pushed several new updates in recent months. HONOR Watch 6: HONOR also launched its new smartwatch with an incredible 35-day battery life without breaking your bank. The device is made from recyclable aluminum alloy and weighs just 41 grams. Where are the foldables? If you're waiting for Samsung's fresh lineup of foldable devices, you can read Hamid's detailed post about the Galaxy Z Fold8, Flip8, and Z Fold Wide, a passport-style device expected to rival the foldable iPhone. This week in Google News Image: Google Catch up on some of the latest Google and Alphabet news updates that arrived throughout the week: Gemini co-lead departs: Noam Shazeer, who served as VP of engineering and technical co-lead for Gemini, is leaving the search giant for OpenAI. Shazeer is best known as one of the co-authors of the 2017 "Attention Is All You Need" paper, which introduced the Transformer architecture that now powers most LLMs. Waymo recall: The Alphabet-owned self-driving car maker recalled its fifth-generation Automated Driving Systems (ADS) after multiple cars drove through closed construction zones. The NHTSA website said Waymo is currently working on a fix, and freeway driving is being restricted. This week in Apple News Image: Apple Catch up on some of the latest Apple news updates that arrived throughout the week: Tim Cook confirms price hike: The departing Apple CEO confirmed the looming price hikes for Apple's future products without naming any, adding that “Unfortunately, price increases are unavoidable.” Despite having cash and silicon expertise, Apple has no plans to build its own memory and storage factories. An educated estimate suggests customers could end up paying around $1,299-1,399 for the base iPhone 18 Pro. iPhone Air isn't dead: If you were thinking the iPhone Air has lived its life, a new report claims otherwise. The next iPhone Air (codenamed V62) is expected to arrive in the spring of 2027, featuring an additional rear camera for ultrawide photography and improved battery life to address its biggest drawbacks. This week in Meta news Catch up on some of the latest Meta, WhatsApp, and Instagram updates that arrived throughout the week: A long-requested feature: Instagram has finally enabled users to write individual captions for each image or video in a carousel. Rolling out to all users, you can select "Multiple Captions" option from the dropdown while creating a carousel in the app. Threads reaches new milestone: Meta's text-first social media platform crossed 500 million monthly active users. It's now expanding the Communities feature beyond beta, adding a new set of tools to make participation easier and more engaging. This week in AI news Image via DepositPhotos.com Catch up on the latest artificial intelligence news updates that arrived throughout the week: Unreal Engine 6: Epic Games' upcoming engine brings changes to the programming model, portability improvements, and generative AI integration. It focuses on the use of generative AI models and tools like Claude and Codex to play a central role in helping developers "build content faster." Americans and AI: New research suggests that about 49% of American adults use AI chatbots such as Gemini and ChatGPT. However, many are skeptical about the impact of AI on both the personal and societal levels, believing it may be harmful in the long run. Mainframe exit vendors might exit: Gartner predicts in its new report that 75% of mainframe exit vendors, which help companies migrate their legacy mainframe systems to modern cloud environments, will either pivot or cease operations as the market realities take hold by 2030. This week in Microsoft News Microsoft announced Windows 11 version 26H2; confirmed a new bug where the Recycle Bin delete prompts display internal file names instead of actual ones; the latest Patch Tuesday updates seemingly broke some third-party Office integrations. You can check out Taras's freshly baked Microsoft Weekly roundup to catch up on all the interesting stories this week. This week in science news Image by Steve Johnson via Pexels Catch up on some of the latest science and out-of-this-world updates that arrived throughout the week: The end of the universe: A new Cornell study suggests the universe will not expand forever. Because of the negative dark energy, it could stop expanding and collapse into a "big crunch" in 20 billion years. The impact of traffic: Researchers found that urban traffic pollution, specifically nitrogen oxides and fine particles, quickly alters the atmospheric electric field measurably in urban areas. This indicates that atmospheric electricity could become a valuable tool to monitor urban air quality and activity. The light of life: A study revealed that living organisms emit a faint, invisible glow called ultraweek photon emission. This natural light significantly decreases after death and increases during stress, offering a highly promising new method for noninvasive medical health diagnosis. Mysteries of time: A new study suggests that the direction of time is not fixed in certain quantum systems. Standard equations of energy loss remain time-symmetric, which means laws can theoretically run backward or forward. This week in gaming The latest issue of Pulasthi's Weekend PC Game Deals curates several exciting games on sale this week. Epic Games Store is now hosting Robobeat and Citizen Sleeper as free-to-claim titles this week, which you can add to your library. Latest issue of Xbox Free Play Days features four new games: PGA TOUR 2K25, Two Point Museum, Assetto Corsa, and Dead by Daylight. Meanwhile, Xbox Game Pass got another Call of Duty addition, the latest soccer game from EA, an indie road trip hit from last year, and more. Summer sales have made NVIDIA's gaming service cheaper, and it has added support for seven new titles. That said, here are some more stories from the gaming world: Rockstar gives last-gen GTA V players free upgrades tomorrow Major Xbox layoffs may claim South of Midnight developer Compulsion entirely Steam Next Fest returns with thousands of new demos to try out Forza Horizon 6 gets another hotfix for one of the game's online modes Major Xbox layoffs may claim South of Midnight developer Compulsion entirely From the review corner This week, Steven got his hands on the Creative Sound Blaster AE-X internal PCIe sound card, primarily intended for headphone wearers. In the list of pros, it comes with a high-quality headphone amp, low-latency communication enhancements via ASIO v2.3, offers 256-times the audio quality of CDs via DSD256, and has great build quality. On the other hand, it's a bit on the pricier side, only offers stereo output over speakers, and has no EMI shielding. More price drops! We got you covered with some hot tech deals all week. For some reason, if you missed out on a great discount, here is a summary of some recent deals that are still alive: GEEKOM X16 Pro at GEEKOM - $1,119.67 (17% off) Acer 4K Webcam for PC/Mac with All-Metal Unibody Sculpted - $59.99 (14% off) Samsung 990 PRO SSD 2TB - $369.99 (42% off) Nothing Ear Wireless Earbuds Bluetooth - $73.15 (51% off) PowerColor Reaper AMD Radeon RX 9070 16GB - $579.99 (17% off) To view all of our recent deals, click here. So, these were some of the biggest tech news and other updates from this week. There will be more issues of our 7 Days series in the coming weeks and months, so stay tuned. You can also support Neowin by registering for a free member account or subscribing to extra member benefits, along with an ad-free tier option. Have a great weekend!
  • Recent Achievements

    • Dedicated
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Dedicated
      JuvenileDelinquent earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • First Post
      DrWankel earned a badge
      First Post
    • Reacting Well
      DrWankel earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • Week One Done
      Supreme Spray LV earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      507
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      185
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      84
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      78
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      75
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!