While I still love my Mac, there's a definite performance difference between this and my newer, faster Dell laptop from work! My observations:
- Fireworks is definitely more of a challenge (sluggish response to the mouse makes it harder to precisely click at the right moment to get the highest possible score).
- The iMac gets bogged down when there are too many players in a Pirates game -- it works best in the 2-on-2 scenario. Too many humans moving ships around usually leaves me stuck, where I have no appreciable mobility issues with fewer players.
- The HM game is a little sluggish also, but very playable. (Just harder to move around, but I find navigation a bit tricky on the PC, too.)
All of this may be par for the course, as my machine is a little slower than the suggested minimum of 1.42 Ghz. Still, I do resent the pop-up that says, "To view all the features of the Virtual Magic Kingdom website you'll need Microsoft Internet Explorer version 5 or higher, running on a Windows PC." That's just wrong (or should be), for as even the Help page will tell you, the Mac *is* more or less supported:
- OS X 10.3.9 or newer
- 1.42 GHz G4 CPU or faster, 512MB RAM or more, and at least 5GB free hard drive space
- Have one of the following browser versions: Safari 1.3 or 2.0, Firefox 1.04
Which is better than with some Disney software and sites where Mac users are just plain out of luck!
Speaking of browsers, my girls definitely prefer Firefox to Safari. Safari (v1.3.2) often has trouble when loading the login screen more often, and also has more of a tendency to stall out while loading the game. I've also tested (just briefly) the kid-friendly BumperCar 2.0 browser - VMK works, seemingly about like it does in Safari, which was one of my conditions for using it, which my DDs probably will move to soon. (Has anybody else used it more extensively?)
BTW, the absolutely snail-like pace of the Monsters Inc game when running on top of the
Disneyland Monsters Inc page was what led me to find the direct URL for the Shockwave game itself, which then ran like lightening when opened by itself in a window. Here's that link if you missed it before:
http://adisneyland.disney.go.com/media/dlr_v0200/en_US/special/monsters/VMK_Ad.swf
Looking ahead, I'd really like to know how VMK does on the new Intel-based iMacs, which Steve Jobs claims will run 2-3 times faster than the existing G5 PPC iMacs. I want one!