15 Minutes of Fame: Mr. Big

This guy's is bigger. Really. In fact, this interview is expressly designed to provoke e-peen envy. Because really now, if I have to interview this chap while squinting at my (admittedly not-so-tiny widescreen) monitor (because it's still T minus 5 days to my optometrist visit, and respeccing my prescription is definitely in order) in the face of this visual largesse, then all of you people need to hunker down along with me. Misery loves company, and once you get a look at this WoW setup, we'll be able to finish this 15 Minutes of Fame in green-eyed envy together.
Because this is an impressive view of WoW. We're sure there are plenty of you out there nodding along right now, muttering, "Oh, that ain't nuthin', little lady – mine's easily as big as that one ..." Well, folks, I've got pictures of this one. And it's big, really big ... 133 inches worth of big, to be exact.
Main character Mackendall (named after my two daughters, Mackenzie and Kendall, and why the toon is a female)
Guild Benevolent Thuggery
Server US Dragonblight-A
WoWstyle Casual raider, raiding 3-4 times a week in 10- and 25-man raids
15 Minutes of Fame: Ok, Mackendall, they say things are bigger in Texas ... So lay on the specs. What are we looking at here?
Mackendall: Thought you may get some enjoyment out of my new home setup. I recently switched from using my 24" HP LCD to playing WoW in my media room on a 135" screen with a Sanyo plv-z700 1080p HD projector.
Just how big is your screen?
116" wide by 65" tall = 133" diagonal. It's a Da-Lite 93329 Model C; cost about $400.
What's most noticeably different when playing on such a huge screen?
You are really "immersed" into the game in both a visual and audible way, especially when you add the high-quality, eight-speaker surround sound. Imagine having to watch the LOTR trilogy on your PC monitor with PC speakers or headphones. Now compare that to watching it at the movie theatre. Yes, it is that good!
When XT-002 Deconstructor starts having a tantrum, the whole room shakes, and when Onyxia flies over your head, you can almost feel the downdraft from her wings.
We're sold. Tell us more.
Ironically, the setup really helps my vision, as I do not sit 24" away from a monitor and strain my eyes (especially as one gets older and short distance visions requires glasses). Because the screen is 14 to 15 feet away, I am sure my vision will be better off in the long run.
Has the screen size or level of detail changed any of your actual character control or gameplay mechanics?
Although technically I am now playing at a lower screen resolution (1920x1080, compared to my 24" LCD, which was 1920x1200), you can "see" so much more and react quicker to situations. I can also control my character better because of the naturally relaxed seating position. I rarely have the keyboard on my lap and only use it to chat when not in Vent. Normally, I have my arms on each armrest and simply move my wrists and fingers on either the mouse or n52te gamepad so it allows for better control and quicker reaction time. Healing on my shaman was improved dramatically when combining the n52te with my new setup.
With the surround sound system, it allows me to have a separate Plantronics headset for Vent, where I can control the Vent volume yet still here the game very clearly.
Tell us about your sound setup.
- Speakers All Klipsch reference speakers in a 7.1 surround setup
- Center RC-52
- Front left and right 2 x RB-51
- Side Surround 2 x RS-10
- Rear Surround 2 x RB-10
- Subwoofer RW-10d
- Yamaha RX-V1400 7-channel 770 watt amplifier
The setup is just an ongoing hobby, as I do IT help desk support for a living, so I know PCs inside out and usually build a new one every 18 months or so, funds permitting.
So how did you get into all this?
I grew up with father whose business was pinball machines, arcade video games (when they came out) and jukeboxes and who loved his home hi-fi (he had quadrophonic sound in the late '70s!). I learned a lot from him about how electrical stuff worked. I was also the first kid in Australia to play Space Invaders, as my dada got the first shipment from Japan and I had to sit at his small workshop waiting for the truck to arrive one boring Saturday. Because of this, I liked helping him build and fix stuff so learned a lot, and I am practical enough to figure out and research most PC and audio stuff without spending insane amounts of money.
Can you give us a rundown on the evolution of your system?The big screen setup originated back in 2000, when I brought home a spare 800x600 projector from work and hooked up my PS2 and projected the image on the wall. I believe I was playing Gran Turismo at the time.
I then bought an 84" drop-down screen for $100 and hid it behind the front room curtain valance (so my wife didn't complain), and we started watching DVDs. A $100 Sony amp and $100 worth of Koss speakers was all I had, but Gladiator was awesome!
I then moved the setup to a spare room and would play various PS2 games and subscribed to Netflix, and the movie watching began.
We then moved to a new house which had a loft, which we enclosed and made into a playroom for the kids and a movie room. The wife was doing well at her job, so I got the ok to buy some new equipment. I got all new Klipsch speakers for about $2,000 and a new Sony 720p VPL-HS20 HD projector. Cox also introduced HD at about that time, so TV was incredible. I also played a lot of Gran Turismo 4, which was amazing on the big screen and made two-player a seriously fun experience.
A short time later, my wife got tired of the shelves I had the projector on, so I worked with a cabinet maker and we designed a unit that I could both play PC on, hold files and house all the media stuff in without it looking ugly. I did try hooking up my PC, but the Sony was a real pain and 1280x720 turned out to be blurry when playing WoW, so I gave up.
In 2008, we moved to Texas and a new home that had a dedicated media room that was pre-wired, so it was easy for me to set up my gear in. It even had room for the media unit, so we saved money on not having to redo the room. We did have it painted "dark cocoa" and I had to leave the screen behind in the old house, so we bought a new Dalite 135" screen which stays down permanently.
A few months ago, I managed to persuade the wife into upgrading to a new 1080p projector, as they were on sale at Costco. She took the opportunity to replace the media chairs, as the kids had worn them out over four or five years of abuse, so now we had some nice leather ones. I also picked up a new Blu-Ray player for only $200 from Costco, and movies were once again transformed up to another level of sound and vision.
And then you hooked up WoW.
Finally, the wife and kids went back to California to visit family this summer and left me alone for a month. Suddenly I had all this spare time when I got home, so I reran all my PC wires and hooked them up to the projector and reconfigured my UI in WoW to play at 1920x1080 ... OMG! It was amazing.
What about that glowing PC we see in the background?
PC specs are:
- Intel Core 2 Duo E8400 Wolfdale 3.0GHz - OC'd to 3.6Ghz
- EVGA 750i FTW
- SLI ATX Intel Motherboard
- Dual nVidia Geforce 9800GTX in SLI
- 4 x OCZ Reaper HPC 2GB 1066 (PC2 8500)
- 2 x WD Raptor 74GB 10k RPM 16MB HDD
- 2 x 1TB 7200 RPM 32MB HDD
- 4 x ZALMAN ZM-2HC2 NPHeatpipe HDD Coolers
- ZALMANs ZM850-HP 850W Heatpipe-Cooled SLI Power Supply
Let's back up for just a moment. How did you get your start in WoW?
My younger brother introduced me to WoW by giving me his 10-day trial account. He already had a level 60 at the time and was playing almost every day, so he created a mage and we levelled our toons together.
I had been gaming for many years (I'm 40+) but had never played an MMO. The closest I had come was from playing Counter-Strike online, and I really enjoyed playing with others rather than on my own. WoW was a big step up in that social aspect, as now there were a lot more people around you and you could actually talk to them (using either Teamspeak or Skype) so you felt more connected/immersed. Azeroth was a complete departure from my normal gaming environment (Half Life, Medal of Honor, Far Cry, etc.), and I was a big fan of "eye candy," so I was totally blown away by the detail and creativity that went into WoW -- especially as I was able to experience every detail of Azeroth on a high-end system at 1920x1200 on max settings.
Thanks for sharing a look at your system with us, Mackendall. We're sure there'll be quite a few new media equipment plans hatched across WoW.com-dom this week.
Filed under: Features, Interviews, 15 Minutes of Fame






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 4)
theminifig Oct 20th 2009 2:08PM
With a setup like that, this guy's anything but a casual player.
Viper007Bond Oct 20th 2009 2:12PM
Not necessarily. I know many, many people who have a similar setup for watching movies in their home theater. This is just hooking up your PC to it and using it to game. :)
VSUReaper Oct 20th 2009 2:20PM
Actually, he probably is a casual player, although the definition of casual varies person to person.
Most people view casual wow player as someone that doesn't raid alot, doesn't PVP alot, and sometimes has a plethora of alts.
What I see is this guy being bored one day and trying something different, and it worked. Its not like he set this up with wow in mind, he set it up to watch TV, movies, play console games, and wow was just an after thought it seems.
Really cool, I kinda drooled a lil when I saw his rig.
Agerath Oct 20th 2009 6:14PM
Wow. 'I have a big TV' is worth a '15 minutes of fame'?
Time to wrap this column up I think.
Sparcrypt Oct 20th 2009 7:16PM
@Agerath
Sorry but you're officially a tool..
Point of writing an article: to convey something that others will find interesting.
I found it interesting, so did others. Personally I did because I work with technology and haven't yet had time or the cash to manage what he has, so it's nice to see a finished product. Others might have never considered that something like this could be done.. thus interesting for them.
Just cause it didn't overly interest you, you declare it a waste of time?
Turlagh Oct 21st 2009 9:21AM
@Agerath- This is the first "15 Minutes of Fame" that I have read all the way through"... It is called "15 Minutes of Fame", not "I PWN U"
hexzerosix Oct 20th 2009 2:08PM
Pretty tight, my 40" Samsung Flatscreen LCD TV does the trick quite well, playing wow in 1080i resolution is pretty sweet (and yes my ingame resolution is set up that way as well).
I don't know about playing with the surround sound though, I couldn't imagine vent coming in from all 4 corners would sound so good.
Abbadon Oct 20th 2009 2:27PM
It's actually pretty easy to separate vent from in-game sound. I have a wired, usb headset that is set as the default output device in Windows that I use for vent and all my regular PC audio listening. However, WoW doesn't use the Windows default and in the audio interface has its own option on how the in-game sound is output. So there, I have the sound set to run to my 2.1 speaker setup. I love it since it allows me to hear game sounds from the speakers but gives vent the obvious priority being directly on my ears.
Kdolo Oct 20th 2009 2:10PM
lol, fury warrior
Narshe Oct 20th 2009 6:07PM
Hold on little girl
Show me what he's done to you
Stand up little girl
A broken heart can't be that bad
When it's through, it's through
Fate will twist the both of you
So come on baby come on over
Let me be the one to show you
I'm the one who wants to be with you
Deep inside I hope you feel it too
Waited on a line of greens and blues
Just to be the next to be with you
Build up your confidence
So you can be on top for once
wake up who cares about
Little boys that talk too much
I've seen it all go down
Your game of love was all rained out
So come on baby, come on over
Let me be the one to hold you
Why be alone when we can be together baby
You can make my life worthwhile
And I can make you start to smile
When it's through, it's through
Fate will twist the both of you
So come on baby come on over
Let me be the one to show you
LiquidChaos Oct 20th 2009 2:10PM
WIN!
My 32in monitor fails in comparison to that one :( and I thought I was doing good...
traptinacivicsi Oct 21st 2009 4:52AM
Not trying to be a buzzkill, but I really never got the point of overly huge televisions.
I play on a 22" monitor, and when I'm playing the game, I don't notice the edge of the screens or anything. The bigger the tv the bigger that picture is, but it's the same picture just stretched further..
For movies and maybe split screen games I could see this being useful for, not so much a game most people play primarily alone (not counting the millions of players IN the game.)
Also from the few shots from where he sits, I'm assuming, it almost looks like the game text would be a bit hard to read, at least the way he had it set up. And once you start increasing the size of things to see it from far away you are effectively shrinking your actual viewing space...
But more power to him I guess :)
Kyle Oct 20th 2009 2:17PM
I'd hope with a setup like that, Fury is his offspec.
also, my 13 in widescreen laptop hates you for sharing this with us WoW.com. way to rub it in.
PeeWee Oct 21st 2009 3:27PM
13" laptop? Didn't even know they existed. Always thought my 15.4" was the smallest available before you dropped to netbooks. Shows what little I knew =)
John Oct 20th 2009 2:18PM
And, cue all the nerds bragging about their system and how it's better.
Spiraea Oct 20th 2009 2:21PM
That is pretty freaking sweet!
McKree Oct 20th 2009 2:22PM
3-4 Raids a week is casual? So what's hardcore then, hard-wiring a mouse into your forearm and only getting up to drain the septic tank you use for a seat?
But anyway, yeah, sweet home cinema system, and definitely not on the cheap side, but I've seen similar systems already. Only thing I'm really envious of is that he has the space to "waste" on something like that...
Valorum Oct 20th 2009 2:31PM
right, you beat me to it. I raid once a week. Is there anything... less than casual? Occasional?
olzer Oct 20th 2009 2:56PM
Depends, he may only raid 1-2 hours each night, rather than 3/4/5 etc.
flawless Oct 20th 2009 2:56PM
I'd say 3-4 raids per week is about average. Serious would be 5-6 and Hardcore 7 days a week.
Casual is 0-2 raids a week, I'd say.