From an IT view I can only strongly recommend against doing that. Unexpected things happen all the time and you don't get coolness points for doing this.
Just carry it safe.
Also, from a user perspective moving to a new device at least costs time.
You're also lucky you can rely on your muscles and nervous system. I regrettably don't have that luxury which adds to the risk.
Yes, they are. But posting this without context is misleading completely in the wrong direction.
I remember reading an article about how they tuned all of that way into the players favor because the subjective impression of the mathematical probability was far too negative and punishing.
I think it got good press as jrpg and was well advertised on several platforms. Timing based attacks was possibly not related to all of this.
For me personally as friend of jrpgs it was as much a burden as it was an addition and I just wish there was a toggle to do it automatically for people like me who can be biologically incapable of pulling of timing at all times. So a little bit sad about that.
I'm not sure how it is with Nvidia, but with AMD you can have the metric overlay running or even logging, so you could see if it happens on power drain.
For me it mostly happened only in one game (everspace 2) and only certain scenes and then not even always.
Thanks! Doesn't translate well to German, but I now learned that down has yet another translation (Daune) which was also very commonly used here and still is on occasion.
I also think gta is way overrated and I have the vice city cd soundtrack box 😉.
I find more entertainment in saints row, but the whole open world stuff brought me to the conclusion there are people like me where open world is a negative attribute.
Yeah, about that... I had 110w cpu, max 200w gpu, other than that only minor things that don't have much power draw and my at thst time 800w PSU was the minimum.
I upgraded gpu, sometimes 300w spikes and that was it. Now have 1000w PSU. And since it happened so randomly clearly I'd think it's your PSU. 700w would be fine if it was guaranteed, but it isn't.
From an IT view I can only strongly recommend against doing that. Unexpected things happen all the time and you don't get coolness points for doing this.
Just carry it safe.
Also, from a user perspective moving to a new device at least costs time.
You're also lucky you can rely on your muscles and nervous system. I regrettably don't have that luxury which adds to the risk.