Then you can bootcamp it, if you think the five extra FPS are worth the hassle.
What I'm seeing here really, is hate from people who don't understand what Macs (or Apple in general) are all about. They have rarely been about maximum performance, or bang for the buck. They are about the entire user experience as a whole; hardware and software designed to work together. It took me years to figure them out, as I used to hate everything Apple made when I was young. Although, back then all they were really making was expensive rubbish that looked different than normal computers.
What you propably don't realize is, with Macs you aren't only paying the premium for the hardware, but also for the OS. For an example, you could propably get two cheap Acer laptops with the cost of one base model MacBook Pro. And those Acers propably have faster CPU's and graphics chips on them aswell. If you only compare stuff from Apple to cheap brands on the paper, you will never understand what they are about. The understanding part comes when you start actually using them, and that's when you see why people actually buy Macs, even with the premium pricetag. That is when you start seeing the difference between a cheap product and a quality one.
Years ago, I used to work on a corporate grade Toshiba laptop and I was perfectly happy with it. That is, until I tried a MBP and discovered how little things, like the multitouch trackpad, can make your life (and work) so much easier and more fun. Same goes for the Mac Pro I'm using right now. If I wanted to change every single hard drive on my Windows PC, it would take about 15-20 minutes of wrestling with cables and screws. With this, I can do it all in couple of minutes without having to touch a single cable. It's things like that, many simple conveniences that make life easier, why I prefer Macs for desktop use over regular PC's.
That's also why it makes me a bit sad, that some people just hate Apple because it's cool to hate them these days, without even trying to understand them.
If you think all this sounds like I'm some hardcore Apple fanatic and think of it as my religion, I should propably mention that I still have an ordinary component-by-component built Windows machine for hardcore gaming, as it is simply better for that task. Many Mac users however don't. That is the reason, why it would be great to have LFS as a multiplatform title, so it would reach out to as many people as possible. I know it won't propably happen atleast until the game is finished, but it doesn't hurt to have the idea out in the air.
With that, I'll conclude my part in this thread.