The PC version of 'Batman: Arkham Knight' sounds like a disaster
Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment
According to various news outlets the PC version of "Arkham Knight" has run into a number of performance issues, including frequent crashing and a stuttering frame rate. These issues have led to purchasers of the PC version of the game to leave a number of bad reviews on the "Arkham Knight" Steam page, as well as the prerequisite angry and frustrated tweets.
This is actually unplayable. Just done the first "mission" & the stuttering/lag is horrendous. #ArkhamKnight #PC #Steam
- Braig Inc. (@incrediblebraig) June 23, 2015
#ArkhamKnight is officially out and the PC version is currently locked at 30fps. this is 2015. how embarrassing.
- (@blkck) June 23, 2015
And even worse, if Arkham Knight even ran on PC AS INTENDED, the intended has a locked framerate of 30 FPS. Say wut?
- Squidposting Gamer (@untimelygamer) June 23, 2015
i don't understand how they messed up the pc version of batman arkham knight so much
- Andrew Lumley (@Lumleyyy) June 23, 2015
It's worth noting that review copies for the PC version were not provided ahead of the game's release. Many review copies weren't even being handed out until launch day.
While there is no official reason for the "Arkham Knight" PC woes, a Game Informer report suggests that it may be due to outsourced development on the PC version of the game.
- I got a $40K raise using this 30-second strategy. It made me realize loud work, not hard work, always wins.
- Qatar Airways' new CEO explains why it's sticking with the Airbus A380 as other airlines retire the costly superjumbo
- Prince Harry and Meghan found out about Kate Middleton's cancer diagnosis on TV like everyone else, report says
- Upcoming cars and two-wheelers launching in India in April 2024
- Ice melt in Antarctica and Greenland is slowing Earth's rotation, affecting timekeeping: Study
- Elections on a plate: Poll panels fix menu & expense ceiling for Samosa, tea, biryani & more
- Regenerative farming, cover crops will help farmers increase yields, reduce stubble burning: IDH CEO
- Sustainable Event Planning