Matt N
TS Member
- Favourite Ride
- Shambhala (PortAventura Park)
I hope you like it @RicketyCricket! I play the game on PC, but if you have any questions, I’d be very happy to help you!
It's been a while since I've played outside of sandbox but I think the same applies as RCT3. From memory once you have 5 or 6 rides the rides start bringing in a lot of money. Park entrance is still limited by people not going home.Question...
Struggling to find out what works better; high park entry/free rides or vice versa.
On the older games I'd charge extortionate amounts for coasters and the cash would roll in but it seems a bit more tricky on Planet Coaster.
What's the best strategy?
I’ve never really experimented with the economical side of the game, but I’d agree with @Tim; pay-per-ride would probably be more profitable because some guests stay for a pretty long time, and your FPS would also probably suffer whilst trying to get an amount of guests that would make pay-one-price profitable.Question...
Struggling to find out what works better; high park entry/free rides or vice versa.
On the older games I'd charge extortionate amounts for coasters and the cash would roll in but it seems a bit more tricky on Planet Coaster.
What's the best strategy?
Not unless you use the snap to angle option.When building rides on Planet Coaster, is there any way to fix them to a grid like you can with buildings, paths and shops?
Anything made in Planet Coaster with Planet Coaster assets is fine. Some game developers (Nintendo...) have set restrictions but Frontiers marketing relys on people sharing content.This is a question about copyright and YouTube. You may have seen what I have built so far on Planet Coaster and I am now worried that I may be breaching copyright. Do I need to negotiate a license or something, what do you usually do?
Also, I have come up with an idea for the boat ride that involves a copyrighted piece of music, should I try negotiating a license for this music or should I try coming up with another idea.
Those specs are way higher than what I'm using and I have virtually no lag. Hmm... I'm going to do some research.I have a question for you all, and it’s regarding PCs to play the game on. Now I should clarify that I do currently have a laptop that I play the game on, and I wouldn’t personally say it’s a low-specced one; I bought it back in 2017, and the specs are as follows:
Now as I said, this is not a low-spec computer by any means; I paid a substantial amount of money for it back in 2017. However, when running large parks, the FPS are... not amazing. I’m currently in the process of building a new country for my Worlds of Globala park (I shouldn’t be finished in too long, so keep your eyes peeled to that thread if you’re liking the park!), and while the FPS are perfectly adequate (about 6-8FPS when in play mode and about 10FPS or just over when paused), my GPU drivers have crashed a couple of times trying to run it, implying that the computer is really suffering, and my FPS drop substantially to 5FPS or below whenever I record my work for you guys. And I should note that this is with no guests even in the park. If you’ve ever seen any of the videos I’ve recorded in Planet Coaster, especially some of the more recent ones, you get the basic idea.
- CPU: Intel Core i7-7700HQ 2.8GHz (3.8GHz with Turbo Boost)
- GPU: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti with 4GB VRAM.
- RAM: 16GB
So in the mid to long term, I am pondering purchasing a new PC to play the game on. This time, I’m thinking about going for a desktop, because they can be upgraded more easily than laptops if need be, and they often provide more performance for your money. So my question is; do you think it would be worth me buying a new desktop PC, and if the answer is yes, are there any particular tips you could give me? This is not going to be an imminent thing by any means; it’ll likely be at least July/August before I end up buying one, and I should hopefully have a pretty substantial budget by then (possibly somewhere in the region of £1500-2000).
I was more thinking that it might be a good idea if I ever want to attempt something more ambitious in terms of scale or detail than Worlds of Globala, as I feel like my current system might run into difficulties, and Planet Coaster 2 is also possibly rumoured to be coming within the next couple of years, so it might be a good idea to upgrade my system in preparation for that.
Is this within large, heavily-detailed parks, or just in general? Because the PC I’m currently on is absolutely fine if I’m in a smaller park; it’s mainly larger stuff that’s the problem.Those specs are way higher than what I'm using and I have virtually no lag. Hmm... I'm going to do some research.
I don't typically do many big parks so now I get what you mean.Is this within large, heavily-detailed parks, or just in general? Because the PC I’m currently on is absolutely fine if I’m in a smaller park; it’s mainly larger stuff that’s the problem.
I have a question for you all, and it’s regarding PCs to play the game on. Now I should clarify that I do currently have a laptop that I play the game on, and I wouldn’t personally say it’s a low-specced one; I bought it back in 2017, and the specs are as follows:
Now as I said, this is not a low-spec computer by any means; I paid a substantial amount of money for it back in 2017. However, when running large parks, the FPS are... not amazing. I’m currently in the process of building a new country for my Worlds of Globala park (I shouldn’t be finished in too long, so keep your eyes peeled to that thread if you’re liking the park!), and while the FPS are perfectly adequate (about 6-8FPS when in play mode and about 10FPS or just over when paused), my GPU drivers have crashed a couple of times trying to run it, implying that the computer is really suffering, and my FPS drop substantially to 5FPS or below whenever I record my work for you guys. And I should note that this is with no guests even in the park. If you’ve ever seen any of the videos I’ve recorded in Planet Coaster, especially some of the more recent ones, you get the basic idea.
- CPU: Intel Core i7-7700HQ 2.8GHz (3.8GHz with Turbo Boost)
- GPU: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti with 4GB VRAM.
- RAM: 16GB
So in the mid to long term, I am pondering purchasing a new PC to play the game on. This time, I’m thinking about going for a desktop, because they can be upgraded more easily than laptops if need be, and they often provide more performance for your money. So my question is; do you think it would be worth me buying a new desktop PC, and if the answer is yes, are there any particular tips you could give me? This is not going to be an imminent thing by any means; it’ll likely be at least July/August before I end up buying one, and I should hopefully have a pretty substantial budget by then (possibly somewhere in the region of £1500-2000).
I was more thinking that it might be a good idea if I ever want to attempt something more ambitious in terms of scale or detail than Worlds of Globala, as I feel like my current system might run into difficulties, and Planet Coaster 2 is also possibly rumoured to be coming within the next couple of years, so it might be a good idea to upgrade my system in preparation for that.