You'll really need some str and int for most builds tbh. What skill are you going to be using? Reave?
yeah, have got reave already thankfully as well as frenzy, not sure what else to get though. i've been playing it all by ear, i want a melee character though for sure that specializes in "quick" combat, so I've been pumping all of my passives into DEX, dual wield attack speed+dmg, and sword attack speed+dmg.
http://www.pathofexile.com/passive-skill-tree/AAAAAgQAmy0XHVeXYEER1b6n0k3AD9Xt7-NjcDSTtkFaGiyFdPHUUgbul3BjFyFgEiBei8_4wQfXfjQ1HSZsjUCg
that's what my tree looks like atm
Bahamut.Rulerofdarkness said:
»Hmm.. can't find my current GPU on Newegg anymore.
Hey, Proth... with a custom fan curve already set, my GPU idles anywhere from 24-33C depending on the temp of my room. If it's like low 80s/high 70s it might hit 35C. Highest I've ever seen it get while gaming would be 60-65C and that would have been FarCry 3 with maxed settings. Majority of games it only gets to about 60C.
Games like D3 get it to about 55-58C.
Using a 670GTX I believe... About how much could I probably increase my clocks?
My fan curve is as follows: 40% fan @ 30C, 65% @ 60C, 80% @ 70C, and 100% @ 90C. I think.. that's close anyway.
It came with the "factory overclock"... Galaxy brand iirc.
increasing clock speeds will very rarely cause a significant temperature variation. when you start pumping in more voltage to accommodate for higher clocks is when things start to heat up. the major limiting factor when it comes to OCing a GPU is stability; if you see artifacts or get driver crashes it means you've set the clock too high and need to dial it back. fortunately modern hardware regulates itself and it's effectively impossible to outright fry a chip, so there's no danger in experimentation. the upper limit for a majority of cards with be +125 to core clock, some going as high as 200 if you're really, really lucky.
i'm not sure if galaxy does it, but some GPU manufacturers put in their own custom PCBs and electronics in order to better regulate power and thus increase your ability to overclock. asus and msi have the best solutions for this with DirectCU and TwinFrozr brands. EVGA's FTW line is pretty good too.
Overclocking is basically free performance for the stuff you've already bought. Can get up to a 5~10FPS boost for doing it, which is really nice since it costs nothing. Overclocking the CPU is useful too, but doesn't really provide the same level of benefit and is a
lot more technical; however with research and the right chip, if you can OC to 4.5gHZ you're pretty solid. Anything over 4.5 is worthless, though. RAM overclocking is just a complete and utter waste of time and system stability... the difference between, say, 16GB of DDR3 1066mHZ RAM and 16GB of DDR3 2133mHZ RAM is under 1 FPS on average.