Video Games with Boot Camp

Is it possible on a macbook pro (the latest model) while running bootcamp (Mac OSX 10.6 snow leopard; Windows Vista) to play video games intended for PC's like say Fallout 3 or Battlefield Bad Company 2 on the Windows Vista side of the Macbook Pro and not have any problems like slower FPS or glitches? I've checked Alienware and Macbook Pro components (processors and graphic cards) and they are both very similar, so the Macbook Pro would run like a gaming oriented system. Is this true?

Well, I don't want to mis-diagnose your problem... but it sounds like a video card hardware issue to me.
I for one have Boot Camp installed on my MacBook Pro. I have 45GB for Windows, the rest for OS X, and not having enough HD space... I have a 500GB Seagate SATA II drive in a Vantec NexStar 3 drive enclosure. Currently, I plug the HD in via USB 2, but I've ordered the eSATA card online and should have that in the next few days. I've also used a firewire 400 external drive, btw.
I've installed Tomb Raider Legend, as well as Half Life 2: Episode 1 on the external. Both games play fine, and other than lag from running the games at 1400x900 with all the options turned onto high... they play perfectly. With HL2, I turned the filtering down to 2x, and that helped some. I've barely played any Tomb Raider, as I've got that on my primary PC... but I'm looking forward to playing Far Cry again (beat the game months ago) on the MacBook Pro and see how that looks.
The MacBook Pro is an AMAZING PC IMHO, as it continues to do nearly everything I can throw at it well. If it isn't working that way for you, then have an Apple representative take a look while it's still under warranty. Hopefully your unit will be fixed soon.
In the meantime, best wishes and have a great night!

Similar Messages

  • Video Issues with Boot Camp / WinXP Pro

    I have a MacPro 2.66, Radeon X1900 with a 23" Cinema HD Display.
    The problem I'm running in to was the same one I first experienced when installing XP Pro. No video. There was a video signal to the 23" display, but I got nothing other than a black screen.
    I found a solution to use a different monitor, as apparently there are some "issues" with Boot Camp and/or XP Pro and the 23" display.
    The install of XP Pro went fine on a different (smaller) monitor. It's the post-install that is not working.
    I got XP to boot up once or twice and all seemed to be fine.
    Now, when I boot back up in to XP Pro, I get a video signal and can hear XP boot up (Nice cozy XP startup music), but I only get a black monitor screen. No video whatsoever. No posting, no nothing.
    Granted, I have not done it yet, but I'm sure I can slap on the smaller tube and get XP to boot.
    I'm suspecting a video driver issue with the Radeon X1900 and the 23" display, but was wondering if anyone else had experienced this problem and what the solution might be?
    I'm probably going to have to wait to see if Boot Camp 1.2 fixes this issue....seeing how there is already an sata issue that needs to be addressed as well.
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    Michael

    Well, I'm not sure what one should do if another display isn't available. But, I was lucky to have an old 17" Cinema to use instead of the 23" to install drivers with the X1900 card installed.
    I went here...
    https://support.ati.com/ics/support/default.asp?deptID=894&task=knowledge&folder ID=293
    ... and downloaded their Catalyst Control Center, installed it, and went to "Advanced" to do display discovery. Then I did a full shutdown and restart.
    The 23" works now. Though, as others have said, it's black until just before the XP desktop loads (as I assume the drivers load with the desktop).
    Aside from it being a pain to get working on XP, the card screams (on both platforms)! There is a slight bit of fan noise which is pretty subtle and only seems to rev on startup/self-test but so far it's definitely worth it. I didn't think it'd be observable outside of 3D apps but with Mac OS GPU acceleration even Tiger seems faster!

  • A Question about Windows games with boot camp and system requirements

    I don't plan to play many games on my Mac, but after seeing what can be done with it, I've been entertaining the idea of picking up a Windows game or 2 to play in Boot Camp (considering picking up a XP PRO with SP2 for this).
    My question is about the listed systed system requirements and how they might apply to my Mac Pro. I have a dual 2.26.
    As a specific example, I was looking at the game Fallout 3. The box lists a 2.4ghz processor required but I've read on this forum about people running it great with less on their Mac.
    So I was wondering what I would need to consider when looking at those requirements or if games in that range do indeed run well...

    Thanks Kap, you're always helpful.
    That's exactly what I was wondering. How the requirement on the box applied to having an 8 core at a lower clock speed.
    I was looking at XP home at amazon and newegg, but haven't been able to tell if they are 64 or 32 (unless that means just install that version from the disc).
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  • Installing Windows 7 With Boot Camp on Mac Pro 3.1 w/GTX285 Video card

    I have an Early 2008 Mac Pro 3.1 running the latest version of OS 10.6 with all updates.  I have an nVidia GTX285 card installed in the Mac Pro that has been working fine for at least six months under OS 10.6 with Mac drivers downloaded from the nVidia web site and installed under OS 10.6.  I replaced the ATi 2600XT video card with the nVidia GTX285 in order to have CUDA support in Premier Pro CS 5 and it works beautifully.
    I now wish to install Windows 7 Professional 64 bit on this Mac Pro.  I have never had any version of Windows installed on this Mac Pro.  I am using Boot Camp assistant and a new full version of Windows 7 Professional 64-bit.
    My question is do I need to remove the GTX 285 graphics card and replace it with my AT 2600XT before installing Windows 7?  This would be a real pain to do because the two connectors to the motherboard are hard to get to.  However, since Apple never used the GTX285 in any of its computers, I am worried that I will not have any video display when I go to try and install Windows 7 with Boot Cam assistant. 
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    Thank you in advance for responding.
    Tom

    NO.... he has a workstation, and not MBP, nor are "drivers already loaded."
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    Install Windows on its own drive. 
    Pull all the other drives.
    Boot from Windows 7 Pro DVD
    Forget Boot Camp Assistant, it doesn't do anything - unless you really want to install Windows on the SAME drive as Mac OS - not ideal and not what most of Mac Pro owners do.
    Just insert your OS X DVD once Windows is up to date - helps to buy the SP1 OEM version $129.
    Run Apple SETUP.exe (Boot Camp 3.0.x drivers) and update with ASU or manually to 3.2.
    No you don't need to go back and use that ATI. And you dont' want to be in the situation of changing from ATI to Nvidia and all the hassle that adds. you are fine.
    The Mac Pro is as close as anything to a standard Wintel workstation. 
    Add MS Security Essentials or KIS or whatever you favor. KIS2011 or NIS2011 are good, MSSE 2.0 is free and based on their enterprise product.
    AV-Test.org Test Security-Software

  • Can I install Windows 7 with boot camp on my computer, but install all my PC games for it on an external hardrive?

    I have a new Mac, but I want to install Windows 7 with boot camp on it. However, I would only really be using it for gaming.
    On another post, someone said that you could not install boot camp entirely onto an external hardrive. As boot camp would only be for gaming, then could I install all my games (when I'm given the option to chose the file of where to install) onto an external drive which is correctly formatted? (what is the format too?) Also, would USB 3.0 be ok, or would thunderbolt be a better option (hoping its USB)
    Thank you

    you will be fine and either are more than enough for even an SSD.
    NTFS of course.
    Might look thru Google to see if anyone has managed to boot Windows from Thunderbolt, I think someone managed after install and then made a restore image and placed on Tb storage device.

  • Can I install Windows 7 with boot camp, but install all my PC games for it on an external hardrive?

    I have a new Mac, but I want to install Windows 7 with boot camp on it. However, I would only really be using it for gaming.
    On another post, someone said that you could not install boot camp entirely onto an external hardrive. As boot camp would only be for gaming, then could I install all my games (when I'm given the option to chose the file of where to install) onto an external drive which is correctly formatted? (what is the format too?) Also, which would allow for a faster gameplay, USB 3.0 or Thunderbolt? as fast gameplay is important
    Thank you

    How to move steam to another drive: 
    Delete everything in the Steam folder except for the "steam.exe" and the "steamapps" folder
    Move the steam folder over to the secondary drive you want it on
    Open the "steam.exe" and it will reconfigure steam
    Log in and BAM! All your games are recognized
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    Create another folder on the C:\ drive and name it (C:\Users\Sean\Steam Games)
    Run Steam Mover and have it move the game to that location and you are done!
    Now go play the games you want!
    How to have steam on the SSD while having the games on either the SSD or HDD: 
    Delete everything in the Steam folder except for the "steam.exe" and the "steamapps" folder
    Have the "steam.exe" to a folder made on the C:\ drive (C:\Users\Sean\Steam)
    Have the "steamapps" folder on the HDD you want to store your games (D:\User\Program Files\Steam\steamapps)
    Make a junction from the "steamapps" folder to the SSD folder with the "steam.exe" in it
    Open the "steam.exe" and it will reconfigure steam
    Logged in and BAM! All your games are recognized and steam is on the SSD and the games on the other drive.
    Now, you can put what ever games you want on the SSD with Steam Mover (or junctions)
    Create another folder on the C:\ drive and name it (C:\Users\Sean\Steam Games)
    Run Steam Mover and have it move the game to that location and you are done!
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  • Video Out in Boot Camp with Windows XP

    Sorry, this is my first help request... i hope i write in a correct section.
    I installed Windows XP SP2 with boot camp in my Mac Book Pro. I have the third part MiniDisplay Port to HDMI adapter with audio. I use it for projector. I always use it without problems.
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    I know about FN+F5 in windows... but in Mac F5 is keyboard light and if i set Functions keys as normal key (from Boot Camp Options) F5 is refresh key and fn+F5 is the keyboard light.
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    Thaks
    Ale

    Yes, XP will be able to detect the expansion card if you download the appropriate drivers online. When bootcamp was first starting... this article circulated http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=305401... summary, you should remove the fiber channel card before bootcamping. Since then the software has gone through the proper modifications that you can just plug the card in, boot into windows, and download the LSi driver for XP.
    So you'll have no problem setting this up.
    Cheers
    Ron

  • If i buy parallels can i install it with boot camp?

    So yeah If i buy parallels can i install it with boot camp?

    bootcamp is a bootloader
    a setup tool for osx
    and a zip file with tested windows drivers and programs for the apple hardware
    one use the setup tool to make some of the apple hd windows filesystem
    one install windows on the space and the bootloader let you hold down option key to boot into what you want to use today
    parallels is a virtual machine as in running windows under osx in a window if one wish
    parallels can as the only virtual machine that I know of access a bootcamp patition directly where other virtual machines just keep the other hd as a file
    when parallels use the windows partition it will like other virtual machines not be able to access the video card for 3d games though that is only for real bootcamp
    users who don't need to play fancy 3d games on windows will have an easier time using a virtual machine like parallels or virtualbox(free) or wmware
    they require much much much less tech knowlege to install and dont have driver issues like bootcamp can
    both a virtual machine and bootcamp require you to bring your own windows and valid windows key

  • Performance with Boot Camp/Gaming?

    Hi,
    I just acquired a MBP/2GHz IntelCD/2GB RAM/100GB/Superdrive, with Applecare. Can anyone comment about the performance with
    Boot Camp -- running Windows XP SP2, and what the gaming graphics are like?
    Appreciate it, thanks...
    J.
    Powerbook G4 [15" Titanium - DVI] Mac OS X (10.4.8) 667MHz; 1GB RAM; 80GB

    Well, I didn't forget to mention what I did not know yet.... So that's not exactly correct..
    As per Apple's support page, http://support.apple.com/specs/macbookpro/MacBook_Pro.html
    My new computer does have 256MB of video memory...

  • A Potential Convert Looking for Some Help with Boot Camp

    I posted this in the Macbook Pro forums, and somebody directed me here. Hopefully you can help me with my questions.
    Hello,
    I have been a PC user ever since I can remember. I have loved the operating system and have had a Dell Laptop for 4 years now without any problems at all. I have no qualms with the Windows Operating Systems. But, it is time for me to get a new laptop, as I will soon be heading off to college. I was thinking about getting another PC, as they are significantly cheaper than the lower-end MBP that I would get, but I was also thinking about trying out a Mac. I plan on using this laptop for most of my undergraduate education though, so I don't want to buy something and find out it isn't what I want or I can't use it. So, if you would help me, I would like to ask some questions about the lower-end Macbook Pro, and I may just end up getting one.
    First things first, I am going to be going into engineering, likely mechanical or systems, at either WPI, Northeastern, or Tufts. Ah the experience of choosing colleged. I know Tufts uses AutoCAD, WPI uses SolidWorks, but I am not sure which Northeastern uses. Either way, I most certainly will be using a CAD program. I know that most CAD programs do not work on Macs, so I will likely be using Boot Camp. I have though seen on these boards that the AutoCAD licensing does not work with Boot Camp, or that some users have faced major problems with it. If this is so, then it is highly likely that I will be unable to get a Mac as that program is going to be an absolute necessity. Even if this is just a small percentage of the population, I do not want to find mine being of major issue. For those of you who have gotten it to work, how difficult was the installation, and have you had any issues with AutoCAD or the like? With this in mind, would you even suggest that I get a MBP?
    Another Boot Camp question. I have read many posts on these boards discussing different partitioning options, yet I still am unsure what they all mean. I expect to use the Windows side for more than just AutoCAD. I likely will install some games on it for when I am bored, and Microsoft Office, as I do not wish to spend the extra money buying Office for Mac and I need to have the versatility of Excel that I have heard is not found in the Mac version. What is the difference between these two partitioning types, which would you recommend, and how much storage should I partition if I get a 200GB hard drive?
    Yet another Boot Camp question, sorry for so many of these. My friend who has a Mac lauds it for its security, nobody makes viruses for Macs. As I will most definitively be using Windows in Boot Camp, would this compromise this security? I know it will be Windows, but I still imagine that it would be encoded somewhat differently then normal, but I could be wrong. Also, if it is possible for the Windows portion to get a virus, could that affect the Mac portion?
    Also, I don't use an iPod. I suppose I always thought they were overpriced for what they do. Instead I use an Iriver Clix 2, and I love it. The only thing is, I use Windows Media Player to sync it with my library. I know many have qualms with WMP, but I personally favor it more than iTunes, but that is just me. I do not believe that you can download it for a Mac. If I were to download it for the Windows portion, I am assuming that I would have to switch to Windows in order to listen to my music then, correct? I can also add music to it via Windows Explorer. Can I do so through the "Finder"?
    Finally, is the battery life any different when using Windows than when using Leopard? I will likely be using the Windows portion in the class room.
    Sorry for the long-winded post, but I am certainly hoping that I can get some solid answers to make an educated decision before getting my next laptop. I would like to thank you very much for any help that you are able to give me. I do hope you can help me quickly. Thank you.
    Message was edited by: Pyrojoe

    I can't answer all your questions, especially not anything having to do with CAD.
    I still imagine that [Windows] would be encoded somewhat differently then normal,
    No. Windows is Windows. You will need a good Windows antivirus, firewall and antispyware program. It is unlikely that a Windows virus will infect the Mac partition because, ordinarily, Windows doesn't know how to do anything with the HFS+ formatted Mac partition. However, the existence of products like MacDrive means that it is possible to teach Windows how to write to the Mac partition, so I see no reason why a virus could not be programmed to.
    If I were to download it for the Windows portion, I am assuming that I would have to switch to Windows in order to listen to my music then, correct? I can also add music to it via Windows Explorer. Can I do so through the "Finder"?
    Yes. Probably/yes.
    Finally, is the battery life any different when using Windows than when using Leopard?
    Yes. Windows does not have the battery management that Leopard has. The battery runs down much quicker in Windows.
    You didn't ask, but depending on what kind of engineering you want to study, you may be interested in, or even need to, use some flavour of Unix/Linux. On the one hand, you could always create a partition on a PC--or wipe Windows--and install Linux on the PC. That could even be a good learning experience. On the other hand, Mac OS is Unix, but preinstalled. So with a Mac, you would already have a platform for writing shell scripts, you would have Perl and Python built-in, you would have an IDE (XCode Tools) for C/C++/Objective C/Java as well as gcc and make tools already on the disks which come with the computer, and so on.
    Message was edited by: Mr.Lobotomy

  • ISight is not working with boot camp

    Hi,
    I have a Macbook Pro and very satisfied with it. Formerly I worked with Windows XP, so I decided to buy a Macbook and use boot camp. Everything was fine. In my enthusiasm I bought the LED cinema display. Very good display but the iSight camera is not reliable working with boot camp. There is no driver available. Sometimes the camera is recognized as video device but mostly not. When the camera is not recognized then there is a yellow exclamation mark in the device manager. I don't know what to do. Is anybody working with boot camp and the iSight build in the LED cinema display? And what driver do you use? Hopefully I get some help here. Everything is working convenient except this issue.
    Thank you, Frank

    Sorry, I think I mixed some things. I tried several contellations to find out what is going wrong. The iSight is woking with my MacBook (and boot camp). But it is not working with other Laptops or PCs (all with Windows XP). It is working really rarely but not reliable and not replicatable. In all cases I tried only the USB connector from the LED cinema display. Audio, micro and hub is always working without problems. The iSight driver delivered with the Macbook is not working (only with the Macbook itself). If I had known this before I think I would buy the display although. The display is great. But it is a pity that the iSight is not working when you do not use Apple hardware. May be I will buy the Mac Pro in one or two years when I need a new PC. Perhaps someone can answer if Windows XP is working without problems on a Mac Pro? And is the iSight build in the LED cinema display working (Mac Pro and boot camp)?
    Frank

  • Share files between Mac and Windows in same iMac with boot camp

    Hello,
    I am new in using Mac and recently I buy a IMac 24" model.
    I used to use PC a long time with a lot of old document.
    I want to install Windows XP with boot camp.
    But I also want to share my documents, music, video files between Mac and Windows in same iMac.
    How can I do this?
    Thanks in advance,
    Eric

    Hi Eric and welcome to Discussions and the Apple world.
    Mac OSX can read and write from Windows partitions (like the BootCamp Windows partition you are about to create) when using FAT32 as file system for Windows.
    However with FAT32 you are limited to a partition size of 32GB.
    Mac OSX can also read from Windows partitions that uses the NTFS file system, but it can not write to them unless you use a third-party helper like either Paragons NTFS for Mac http://www.paragon-software.com/home/ntfs-mac/ or NTFS-3G http://www.ntfs-3g.org/
    Windows can not even see or use a Mac OSX partition without additional help by MacDrive http://www.mediafour.com/products/macdrive/
    Regards
    Stefan

  • Using built-in iSight with Boot Camp and Yahoo Messenger

    Has anyone had a problem using Yahoo Messenger video conferencing by using the iSight?? It shows up as a USB device in the windows hardware but Yahoo says it isn't available. I can use the camera with other programs though. The camera works perfectly on the MAC side (of course). I can't figure out why I can use it for other programs but not Yahoo messenger. Any ideas.
    Thanks

    Welcome to Apple discussions, DualOSuser
    I no longer use YM in any OS, so I have no problems with it.
    If your only problem is with Yahoo video, have you checked a Yahoo Help search like this one? Yahoo should be able to give you the best help either to tell you how to make their software work with your system or to tell you the limitations of their software.
    You could also check Windows Help in case the problem might be with Windows.
    If you think the problem might be with Boot Camp, try searching Boot Camp Discussions.
    If you get no help via any of those alternatives, when you post back here for other ideas, tell us which Windows and YM versions you are using. Some Windows user may be able to offer suggestions based on your additional details.
    Cheers,
    EZ Jim
    PowerBook 1.67 GHz w/Mac OS X (10.4.11) G5 DP 1.8 w/Mac OS X (10.5.2)  External iSight

  • Problems installing Windows with Boot Camp

    Hello,
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    if any one has ANY idea or sugesstion on how i can rectify this issue it would be greatly appriceated.
    thanks for your time!
    Harry.

    "You can't do both boot drive and storage drive on the same drive.
    A boot drive requires (all data off first) it to be formatted GUID and OSX Extended Journaled, then OS X installed, then option key at boot to select that HD OS X boot drive, then BootCamp proceedure ran and install into the partition it creates on the HD."
    THANKS AGAIN, i think im getting closer to a solution, i really dident think that simple old bootcamp could become so complicated!.
    so i couldent (boot off the ssd as normal) and then create a seperate partition on the hdd of about 30gb, install osx on it, boot from that (with the optical bay back inside), create a thrid partition on the hdd via bootcamp then instal windows?
    its just that erasing and reformating the hdd sounds a bit scary, its taken months of getting the permissions and fixing rouge ubd processes all right so everything works perfectly and seamlessly together with the ssd+hdd combo
    "You can replace the data back into OS X on the HD and use that as extra storage, but your main use OS X user(s) needs to remain on the boot SSD.
    To do this you need to use Carbon Copy Cloner to clone the OS X boot partition of the SSD to the blank/empty of data HD, this will copy all the Users accounts accuratly so you can access them from the SSD.
    As you can see here, I can access the same user folders of my cloned partition from the original partition, no "-" minus signs on the folders as I'm the exact same user.
    I am currently booted into Macintosh HD and accessing my same named user folder on the clone on Macintosh HD 2.
    So basically OS X on HD will become your new "Storage Drive"
    this is pretty much exactly how im set up at the moment! with the user account and applications on the SSD and libarys like iphoto, itunes etc are on the HDD and i symlinked some others like the downloads off to the hdd aswell.
    thanks for your help again, ive given you some more stars for your time!
    Harry.

  • HT3986 Hi, i have a macbook pro version 10.6.8 with boot camp version 3.0.4. I managed to install windows 7 professional x64, however when i insert my OS CD to install the drivers using the boot camp method, it says unsupported to this computer model

    Hi, i have a macbook pro version 10.6.8 with boot camp version 3.0.4. I managed to install windows 7 professional x64 bits but however when i tried to install the drivers using the OSX MAC CD using boot camp, it prompt me boot camp x 64 is unsupported with this computer model. Then i tried the method by right click the bootcamp x64 and managed to install the drivers. However, i still couldnt manage access the internet and it prompts me no networking hardware detected...Any idea how can i solve it?
    P.S i tried updating my bootcamp version 3.0.4 in mac os with bootcamp x64 version 3.1 exe but it shows me weird wording..
    my bootcamp version in windows 7 is 2.1..

    Uninstall 2.x totally
    Use CCleaner Registry tool
    Do whatever you need to to nuke the existing Apple programs and folders hidden here and there also.
    BC 2.2 was XP and Vista only

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