I suggest checking out http://firstpersonshooters.net/ which has a relatively complete list of the genre along with screenshots, videos, etc., quite a few demos and even a good handful of completely free ones.
MAIN SYSTEM.
AMD Phenom II X4 940 Black edition (3.01GHz)
Gigabyte -MA790FX-DS5--M.B
XFX NVIDIA GTX 290 1 GB GPU
AVER-MEDIA TV TUNNER CARD
ZION 8 GB RAM DDR2 1066 MHZ
ZEBRONICS BIJILI CABINATE
Corsair 750 Watts PSU
MOSERBAER 22X SATA DVD WRT. X 2
500 GB SEGATE SATA HDD X 4
LG Black Blu-ray/HD DVD-ROM & 16X DVD±R DVD Burner SATA
Secondary System !
Asus p5vd-SE series M.B
Dual core 2.6GHZ
9800 GT GE-force XFX 1 GB GDDR-2
4 GB RAM Dynet
Windows Xp ,,vista ,, fedora-9 triple Boot.
500GB segate SATA HDD
100GB segate IDE HDD
100GB WD IDE HDD
17" Tco 03 Display samsung 773 DFX Moniter.
LG 22x DVD WR+
LG 18X DVD WR+
Samsung DVD Rom
Intex Tv +FM Tunner Card
UT starcom R300R2u Router
Apple Ipod 60 Gb
What do you want to be when you grow up?
Hardware and software professional.
What makes you laugh?
Funny stuff , Etc
What is the thing in life you treasure most?
Family Friends and computers
What's the geekiest thing you've ever done?
Webcams connected at Main door so that i can watch whats going on there.!
What do you do to entertain yourself?
Watching Movies , games ,,,basically i am a hardcore gammer.
Sorry Charan, I just got this comment you left 5 days ago. I would enable AHCI rather than RAID. You won't really notice THAT much performance difference by using RAID. You do need at least two hard drives to use RAID and the most common configs would be either RAID 0 or RAID 1. RAID 0 stripes both drives and stores data on both of them as well. The problem with RAID 0 is that you lose all the data on BOTH drives if one drive fails and can't be recovered. RAID 1 is better because it still uses two drives, but the data is written to both for a mirror image. If one drive fails you have everything on the other drive protected and once you add a new second drive the data gets copied back over to it so you always have a back up. The downside of this is your data takes up twice the amount of room that it normally would on one drive, but at least you can sleep at night knowing it's protected better.
AHCI won't protect your data, but allows slight better performance over Standard IDE, and it's hot swappable among other benefits
Hope this helped...sorry it's late, and have a great day! :)
You shouldn't enable AHCI in the BIOS until you do a manual install of the drivers in Windows. After they are installed you can enable it in BIOS and it will be detected properly when Windows boots.
I left a more detailed reply back on your original post. :)