Can You Game on a Mac?
source : https://www.howtogeek.com/295231/can-you-play-video-games-on-a-mac/
Macs
have a lot of advantages. Maybe you like the simplicity of macOS, the
sexy industrial design, or work in a creative field where they’re
pretty much a requirement. But if you’re also a gamer, you may
be wondering: can they handle the games you want to play as well as
Windows?
Can You Play Games on a Mac?
Macs
are made of the same components as any other PC. They’re just an
Intel x86 computer in a fancier case with a different operating
system. This means there’s no real hardware barrier to gaming on a
Mac. It’s not like a PC has some magic video game component that
your Mac lacks.
However,
Macs aren’t exactly designed for
gaming. The discrete graphics cards used in the high-end Macs
aren’t all that great, and you don’t have the choice of the more
powerful graphics cards you would in some Windows PCs. The Mac Pro is
an exception, which carries a decent graphics card inside, but it’ll
cost you a lot more than a comparable Windows PC would.
These
graphics cards are also soldered in, so there’s no way to upgrade
them a year or two down the line—even on desktops like the iMac or
Mac Pro. Windows desktops are more upgradeable in this respect.
Entry level
Macs don’t have dedicated graphics cards at all—they have
integrated graphics chips that are even more asthmatic. They
might reach the absolute minimum requirements of some popular
modern games, but just barely.
There’s
no way you’ll be able to play new games at full resolution with all
the detail settings cranked up, even with a specced-out iMac—but
they are technically capable of playing many games. Even a
MacBook Air can play Minecraft. But, although it’s possible, is it
worth doing?
A
Mac is never going to be as good for gaming as a dedicated Windows
PC, especially for the price. Even a Mac Pro can’t compete with a
gaming-focused rig that costs a quarter of the Mac Pro’s $2999
price tag. If you’re serious about having the best gaming
experience, your Mac isn’t going to cut it. Build your own gaming
PC or buy a console and be done with it!
If
you’re looking to casually play the occasional game, though, a Mac
may suffice. I travel a lot, and only have my MacBook with me when I
do. I’m away from my beloved PlayStation 4 for months at a time. My
MacBook is able to give me a small gaming fix. It might be more
methadone than heroin, but it’s something.
What Games Are Available?
The
biggest issue with gaming on a Mac, though, is game availability.
Windows’ DirectX APIs are incredibly popular with game developers.
They don’t have any equivalents on macOS, which makes it harder for
developers to port their games. Because of this, the catalog of games
available on macOS is much much smaller than that for Windows. There
are plenty of big games that will never come to Mac. Things, however,
are a lot better than they used to be.
While
you can buy games through the Mac App Store, major games retailers
like Steam,Origin, Battle.net,
and GOG all
have Mac clients with better selections than the App Store. If the
game you want is there and your Mac has the hardware to run it, it
will run.
The
quality of macOS’ game selection depend on what games you like to
play. AAA first person shooters are especially underrepresented. None
of the recent Call
of Duty orBattlefield games
are available on macOS, but other genres, like MMORPGs and strategy
games, are actually pretty well covered. Popular games like World
of Warcraft, Civilization
VI, and Football
Manager 2017 are
available and work without you having to jump through any weird
hoops.
Here
are the top 15 most popular titles on Steam:
It’s
a broad mix of AAA titles from major publishers, like Tom
Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wildlands, and
indie hits, like Rocket
League.
Of the fourteen games (the Season Pass for Wildlands also
makes the top fifteen), only five are playable on macOS. However,
those five games—Rocket
League, Pillars of Eternity, Counter-Strike, Blackwake, and ARK—are
all older or independent titles. Wildlands,
Dawn of War III, For Honor, and
the other big AAA titles are Windows exclusives, at least at the
moment.
This,
then, gets to the heart of it. If the kind of games you’re looking
to play are available, work on your specific Mac, and you don’t
mind playing them with the quality settings turned down low, you’ll
be fine. If you want to shoot your friends in Battlefield
One in
high resolution, macOS is about as useful as a toaster.
Better Ways to Game on a Mac
If
you don’t want to plop down another $800 for a decent Windows-based
gaming PC, you have a few options for better gaming on your Mac. The
first of which is…well, Windows.
Gaming in
macOS is stunted in more ways than one. It might be easy, but if
you’re serious about gaming, it’s probably worth your while to
set up Boot
Camp. Boot
Camp lets you install Windows on a separate partition, so you
can boot into Windows or macOS whenever you want. You have your macOS
partition for day to day use, and when you want to game, you restart
your Mac and run Windows. You still won’t necessarily be able to
play games at high settings—after all, you still have whatever
low-power graphics card came with your Mac—but at least you’ve
got a much wider selection of games to choose from. Also, because
they’re designed for the operating system, the same games tend to
run better on Windows than on macOS. Even if you can play the game
natively in macOS, you might have a better experience running it
through Boot Camp.
If
that doesn’t appeal to you, you might be interested in NVIDIA’s
new game streaming service called GeForce
Now.
Instead of running the game on your PC, NVIDIA runs the game on a
high powered server somewhere and streams it to your PC. That way,
its servers are doing all the heavy lifting, and you reap all the
benefits—it’ll even let you play Windows games from macOS, no
Boot Camp required.
This
service is not available quite yet, but it will be launching for Mac
in March of this year. This looks like it could be a promising way to
game on your Mac without having to faff around with dual booting.
Sony has a similar service for PlayStation 3 games, but there are
currently no publicly announced plans to bring it to macOS.
Macs
are not gaming computers, but they are computers you can game on—as
long as you accept their limitations. If you’re looking for a
computer that can play the latest games in high quality, look
elsewhere. But if you already own a Mac and just want a way to kill a
few hours, it can work. It has for me.




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