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翻訳の問題を報告
Personally have multiple versions of Sound Blaster running atm, from an ISA bus card in my Pentium MMX AT box all the way to the PCI-e Z seried in my modern rig. All but one of them has been worth every penny.
And once you look into higher range cards near and above the $100 market you have equal quality in near all terms (DAC/ADC/AMP, etc) except minor discrepnacy in possible interpherance from other internal hardware.
But again, for games, a good SoundBlaster or other high grade card is well worth the price, and far better then a DAC, for positional audio, period.
This. I bought an M-Audio Super DAC and it delivers superior reverb and deepness compared to my old sound card, with my hi-fi speaker setup. That's not even an expensive DAC.
Those Ghetto Blaster cards don't even have proper sound caps, they have a load of cheap Chinese rubbish Jamicon non-audio caps thrown all across the card. They're crap compared to a good DAC.
Sound Cards are junk ever since we moved away from WinXP
Even if you don't get an audiophile grade external DAC/Amp, it'll most likely be better than most sound cards anyways.
Sound cards are a dying breed. Pretty much only marketed towards eager gamers that buy up anything you slap the word "gaming" on, and the unknowing home audio engineer. Sad news for sound cards, external DAC/Amps do it better for gamers, and external audio interfaces do it better for the home audio engineer.
It is 2018, we have enough high speed connections that we do not have to be limited to putting everything inside our PC, using up valuble PCI-E lanes.
Most users can't afford speakers (at least good ones) and typically just use a Headset. That is where the difference can be huge when comparing Onboard Audio, Sound Cards, and USB DACs
Even if someone is doing music composition or other audio work, there are better external alternatives. Sound cards are a dying breed.
I have done 5 person side by side comparisons of a ForucsRite Scarlet 2:2 external DAC, a Soundblaster Z, and Soundblaster X-Fi Titanium (PCI not PCI-e), with a highend Realtek ALC 1150 on an MSI board with dedicated CAPS and circutry as a baseline for integrated...
http://us.focusrite.com/usb-audio-interfaces/scarlett-2i2
https://us.creative.com/p/sound-blaster/sound-blaster-z
https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16829102024 (note that mine is the standard PCI not PCI-e version)
With 5 different people being able to try the systems side by side using a mixture of Sneheiser headphones, M-Audio Studio Monitors, and Turtle Beach Gaming headsets.
After people mix and matching across all machines, and being able to test and try games and movies at their leisure the average responce was as follows...
Not a single quote from any one person, but a fair sumarization of the feelings of the 5 person tester group.
Will an external DAC beat an internal card on the technically listed noise floor, sure...
Will an external DAC have better componants or layout? Not neccisarily. Get a good audio card above the $30-$50 range and you will have qual componants and comparable sheilding and layout.
Will an audio card with a proper 3D sound engine provide better positional audio for playing games over a simple DAC/AMP? Every Time
When you consider that all three of those products are in the $100-$200 range, I would take a card over DAC for games any day.
I doubt arguing with somebody that doesn't even know this is worth the time and effort.
You used an audio interface, which prime duty is for recording. Not really a good choice for your test, as it isn't a DAC.
I have one of those, and they are kinda meh on playback. They are great for playback, with low latency, but you get a rather bland output. Great for recording on the go, not so great for listening to Metallica.