
But what if you want to upgrade your existing PC or even buy a new one? The big question for you is whether an upgrade to Windows 7 is right for you. We try to give you the 411 in this latest feature.
If you own a PC with Windows XP: Despite Vista's release nearly three years ago, PC game developers are still making their titles with Windows XP in mind and for good reason. A large fraction of the world's PCs still run the operating system that was first launched in 2001 and Windows Vista's launch issues kept XP from being supplanted. Only a couple of games have been released for the PC that run only on Windows. One was the poorly handled port of Halo 2 for the PC. Another was the recent RTS bomb Stormrise from The Creative Assembly and Sega. Officially PC desktop can no longer sell PCs with Windows XP installed although extended support for the OS will continue until 2014.
At the moment, you don't need to upgrade your PC from XP to Windows 7 immediately. However, Windows 7 will almost certainly hasten the end of XP as a PC gaming platform and within a couple of years it will likely be the dominant OS on many gamers' PC rigs. Windows 7's native support for both DirectX10 and DirectX11 (something that XP doesn't have) is also a plus as game developers move onto the next generation of graphics. So while you don't need to rush out and get your upgrade disk tomorrow, you may want to think about putting Windows 7 in your PC by the end of 2010.
If you own a PC with Windows Vista: Oh boy. First, we are sorry. Windows Vista has been one of Microsoft's worst OS releases in some time. While some of the issues have been fixed via patches and driver updates, the gist of it is that Vista, launched in January 2007, just didn't work out of the box as advertised. Microsoft tried to tie in the launch of Vista with their Games For Windows marketing launch to get more people into PC gaming. The reception to that has been mixed as well with many popular PC games bypassing the Games For Windows branding altogether.
If you have a PC with Windows Vista and it doesn't work right, upgrading to Windows 7 is almost a must. It's basically the same architecture as Vista but Windows 7 runs faster and has better compatibility (and that's just in the release candidate version). However if you are happy with your Windows Vista PC there isn't a real reason to upgrade anytime soon. Vista already has DirectX10 support and will also support DirectX11 just as Windows 7 does. Microsoft will also keep updating and servicing Vista for several years, unlike Windows XP which near the end of its life.
If you want to get a new PC: Unless you are getting a new netbook (some of which still run under Windows XP) the chances are likely that a new PC will either have Windows Vista or Windows 7 pre-installed after tomorrow. In this case there's no contest. Get the PC with Windows 7 available. More game developers will make titles with Windows 7 in mind and you should be ready for all of the cool new titles that are due out in the next several months that support DirectX11 graphics and features.
While Microsoft is not using Windows 7's launch tomorrow as a platform to push PC gaming to the masses as they did with Windows Vista and Games for Windows Live, the ironic thing is Windows 7 should be better for PC gaming in the long run as Windows XP is finally and slowly phased out and both gamers and game developers move onto the next generation of hardware and graphics in their PCs.



Short answer is: Yes.
Why? Well if you are gaming on XP you aren't doing any current gaming, your computer can't read over 3gb of RAM or run DirectX 10, so this post only applies to those with Vista.
That said on my two home gaming PCs (one a laptop for LAN parties and other a desktop) on clean install with Vista 64 Ultimate and 7 Ultimate the boot time is about 15% quicker, the system load is less (thanks to a thinning of background services and better default prioritizing of resources) and it takes up about 25% less RAM at startup on a clean boot (clean boot compared for both systems). As far as optimizing your system for gaming Windows 7 has a few deeper options but I could spend all day listing those.
If you have the means or money and you plan on PC gaming then YES UPGRADE!Posted at 11:00PM on Oct 21st 2009 by Anticrawl