- cross-posted to:
- retrogaming
- cross-posted to:
- retrogaming
Following up from my HD 3870 video — this time I picked up an untested HD 3850 from 2007 for $9.90. Cleaned it, repasted it and threw it at 6 games on a Core 2 Duo rig.
• GTA San Andreas
• CoD4 Modern Warfare
• Tomb Raider Underworld
• Just Cause 2
• NFS Most Wanted
• Crysis
Temps hit 106°C but it survived.



Fair point, I appreciate the honest feedback. Still figuring out what works best. What kind of thumbnail would you prefer for this type of content?
In my personal opinion, I would be more inclined to click on the video if the thumbnail at least looked like a still image from the video. But to be honest, I probably still wouldn’t click on the video for a few reasons:
I’m also going to guess you’ve been using LLMs for advice on your videos, to which I say: don’t bother, regardless of your feelings on them, because they offer advice for a very generic audience, and you’re making videos that grandma is never going to click on, even if the algorithm shows it to her.
My most successful thumbnails either came straight from the video (but truthfully, that was mostly luck), or I spent a decent amount of time making something that I thought looked cool. That also has led to some “failures”, though.
Good luck!
That’s a fair point about the premise — but as a nerd myself, I’d still click out of curiosity. Not just ‘does it work’ but HOW does it work at 106°C? And what FPS does a Core 2 Duo at 3.8GHz actually push in 2026? That combo is what got me curious enough to test it. Also, thanks for taking the time to give detailed feedback — genuinely helpful for improving future videos
No problem.
But you’re giving your video’s packaging far too much credit. People don’t sit and think that deeply about every thumbnail/title they see. Even nerds have gut reactions because there is so much content available, and my gut reaction to this would’ve been at worst, “AI slop” and at best, “boring”.