Woah, is that all? Considering BF3 has a 560 as recommended requirements that's rather surprising. I remember when Oblivion first came out and everyone's machines were having a tough time for months.DirectX 9.0c video card with 1 GB RAM - GTX 260/Radeon 4890 or higher
Heh, nice try but not quite I'm afraid.draythefingerless said:lol, are you joking? an i7 is MORE than enough for ANY game out there. i7 has 4 cores with multithreading(aka uses smart technology to double the output of the 4 cores to 8).
long story short, more cores = less Hz needed = less temperature problems. i have at least 3 games that use my i7 to full capacity. an i7 is MORE than enough for skyrim. the whole point of having multiple cores is so you DONT have temperatureproblems. if you have 2 cores running at 2.3gh, that means 2.3 * 2 = 4.6. but if you have 4 cores, running at 1.8 Ghz, that means 4 * 1.8Ghz = 7.2 Ghz.
as for the GPU, any Gfx over the 200 series for nVidia and the 4000 series for ATI will work with this game.
For starters, most programs will not utilise more then 1 core, also even when optimised for multicore - shit dun' work that way.
Also temperature problems are just (if not more) relevant to multiple cores then single, any reductions in temperature are due to architectural improvements and smaller manufacturing processes. One of the reasons why P4 was so hot for example is because the design was pretty crap and the silicon wafers were much thicker then say a Sandy Bridge.
Again, you DO NOT multiply individual core speeds by the total number of cores to get a measure of processing power, that's rediculous.
200 series or better is also completely incorrect, some of the low end cards in that series are complete crap and will never run this.
Please do a bit of research before coming up with absurd conclusions.