Resource Management Center Pubg

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Grimarlon Varner

unread,
Aug 3, 2024, 6:01:46 PM8/3/24
to lmeninlite

Survival of the fittest meets explosive multiplayer mayhem as you drop into a cutthroat battleground, scavenge for weapons, and outlast opponents. The battlefields shrink and ammo gets harder to find while hundreds battle it out to be the last player standing!

Sharpen your mind, boost cognitive prowess, and unlock your full mental potential with addictive games designed to challenge and entertain while enhancing memory, problem-solving, and critical thinking skills.

Strategic thinking takes center stage without the complexity of endless resource types and high-stakes battles, allowing you to indulge in the joy of collecting items and expanding your own virtual empire.

Packed with delicious challenges and culinary creativity to bring the sizzle of the kitchen right to your fingertips! Can you keep customers happy and avoid long wait times as you whip up a virtual feast and unleash your inner chef?

The ultimate fusion of casual or hyper-casual simplicity layered with mid-core depth. This genre redefines mobile gaming with low barriers to entry and a high skill ceiling to provide accessible yet engaging experiences. These games often include features such as progression systems, upgrades, or live ops events.

Unleash your inner tycoon where every tap brings you closer to endless wealth and success! Virtually impossible to lose and with instant gratification, Idle Clicker games are played in offices all over the world.

Multiplayer Online Battle Arena games feature some of the biggest eSports titles of all time! The format focuses on lanes, upgradeable characters and intense PvP action to create an adrenaline-fueled frenzy of epic proportions!

Lots of comparable characteristics with Mobile Action RPG games. The difference here is within the core gameplay mechanic - our mobile RPG games are turn based, so no running around hacking and slashing your way through enemies here!

Huge maps that are ready for you to create massive empires on and battle all sorts of enemies in far away or ancient lands. Hugely popular on PC with players that show real dedication and very good resource and time management skills.

You'll find the biggest names in sports games here as you step into the shoes of your favorite athletes, command the field, and rewrite history. Unlike Casual Sports games, these games have a steeper learning curve and require a higher level of skill.

To round off our game genres we have the champions of casual games! Many have tried to take their throne but King.com have maintained their position as market leaders for a very long time now. This genre features all of their popular games.

There is a feeling that I get when I am faced with wide, open spaces in games. It might be a generalized anxiety. It could be the evolutionary output of some system that warns me, gets my adrenaline up, and makes me wary about leaving the trees for the plains. In PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds, I get this swimming feeling when I know I have a long way to go without any kind of cover or protection. It's like open water.

I had the same experience during the early days of Minecraft, which I can only describe as feeling profoundly exposed to the world. That world was not, in fact, dangerous, but I felt like there could be something around every corner ready to destroy me.

The finest distillation of that feeling exists in Sunless Sea. It is a game about being a ship's captain on the Unterzee, an ocean that fills a gigantic underground cavern. The lore around this is, well, complicated, but it produces a strange and wonderful universe of bleak Victorian characters paired with Mivillian fantastical situations. There is unthinkable machinery that spins the gears behind the world. There are figures, both cloaked in shadow and lit by lamplight, that grip your life in iron fists. And, under all of that, there's the dark.

Operating a ship is hard. There are a few different resources you have to manage. There is fuel, of course, for powering your ship across the ocean. There are supplies to feed the crew members of your ship, and there are the members themselves. They could be eaten or drowned or made mad at any time, so you need to keep those numbers up. And, finally, there is terror.

Terror comes from going out into the dark. It's the literalization of those feelings I was talking about in PUBG and Minecraft. It's the understanding that you are taking a small craft out into a dark, violent place, and that there is nothing but kilometers of black ocean between you and the next location that you're attempting to get to. And, for me, those numbers translate to a palpable feeling in my body. My boat trundles through the blackness, beacon shining out into the dark, and I get worried.

Sunless Sea uses some light procedural generation to make its world work. The zee shifts, subtly, when you're not looking. So while you might always see the Salt Lions, giant stone sculptures that loom in the infinite night, the location changes from captain to captain. This playthrough of the game will have them slightly more south; the next one will have them much further north, closer to the icy caps.

Traveling out into the dark in a new game, then, means that you're putting your fate in the hands of the general knowledge that you've gained across playthroughs. There's no way of knowing if the Salt Lions will be in the place you think it is, and that can be distressing. You're under a lot of pressure, after all.

The pressure from the resource management comes to bear in this way: You have a task given to you from your home dock in London. That task is your only way to make money. You are low on fuel and lower on supplies, so you have to do this task. You have no choice.

Something happens on the way. A wave rocks up and destroys your supplies, or you're given the hard choice between your people, your fuel, and your food. You end up in a worse position than you were previously. Now you have to make your way to your destination and home again at the slowest speed possible in order to conserve fuel. Or, worse, you're paddling along with no fuel at all and no light to guide you. It's a captain and their crew sitting in the middle of a black ocean, accruing terror all the while, hoping that you can get to a place that will provide the smallest amount of solace. And, maybe, you get there. Or you die.

The past few years have been dominated by talk about immersion and identification. First person games offer their visceral landscapes of domination and destruction in order for you to really feel like you're in the body of a superhero. Virtual reality evangelism is still dominated by discourses of making the player feel like they're really there, despite the fact that "there" seems to most often be "sitting in a chair" or "standing in one location looking around."

None of those experiences get close to the goosebump feeling of terror going up while fuel goes down in Sunless Sea. I wouldn't say that I'm "immersed," but I am on board. I've bought into the fiction. I know that these people that I have put on my ship will die with me. I know that our stories, intermingled so far, will dissipate when our lives do. There's also the machinic player inside of me who knows that his progress will be at the bottom of the ocean with this character.

The Sunless Sea feeling is wonder. There is what I know, and then there is the stuff that is beyond it, and then there's me trying to figure it out. The philosopher Immanuel Kant called it the sublime. Video games are always trying to tap into this feeling, but these quiet moments where I am pressing up against my own ability to continue playing the game are the only times that I really feel it. Bombast and explosions don't make it happen for me. Instead, it's about being still and slow. It's about knowing the stakes and what could be, or will be, lost.

I subject my phone to heavy workloads, such as playing some of the most demanding games, to test it. Below, I'll list the games I use to test my Android phone, explain why I prefer them, and share the optimal settings I use for maximum strain.

Genshin Impact is an open-world action role-playing game commonly regarded as the most graphically demanding and resource-intensive mobile game. It has beautiful visuals with high-resolution textures, dynamic lighting and shadows, complex animations, and particle effects.

As a result, Genshin can put a lot of stress on a device, especially considering its high memory and storage use. Some phones, including flagship iPhones, dim the screen when you play Genshin Impact for extended periods.

To ensure maximum strain, I always max out all the available in-game visual settings, including graphics quality, render resolution, frame rate, visual effects, and shadow quality. Genshin is my best game for testing because it offers granular graphics settings for manual adjustment.

Gameloft's Asphalt 9 is the best racing game for testing your phone's performance. The game features some of the best graphics for a mobile racing game, with stunning, high-resolution graphics that include HDR rendering, detailed textures, reflections, and particle effects.

It contains many challenges whwere you get to race through different scenes, experiencing the game's advanced lighting and shadow techniques that exert maximum strain on the GPU. The gameplay is also demanding due to the fast-paced racing with advanced animations and effects.

But that's not all. I also use Asphalt 9 to test games because it includes high-frame rate support. Adjust the frame rate setting to the maximum available option to get the best benchmarking results.

PUBG Mobile is a popular battle royale game because of its impressive gameplay, excellent graphics, and multiplayer mode. It's another perfect candidate for pushing a phone to the limits because of its fast-paced nature, 100-player multiplayer mode with in-game voice chat, high-quality graphics, complex animations, and effects.

I always download HD resources in the setup screen for testing to ensure I apply more strain to the phone. I also download any pending downloads in the resource management center. Once done, I head to the game's main settings to adjust graphics and audio settings.

c80f0f1006
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages