and... i need an upgrade. barely making it to minimum requirements. though by the time im going to play it im likely going to be upgrading anyway, so not that bad.
Kinitawowi said:
So a three year old CPU (that 3770) is fine for rec-specs but a two year old graphics card is out of date? I've got an i7-4770K (fine) and an AMD 7970HD-Ghz (which is roughly an R9 280, below spec). Either somebody's got their spec balance all wrong or somebody's bribing them to sell more expensive graphics cards.
games are going GPU-heavy for a while now. its no wonder that GPU is the bottleneck while CPUs arent 100% utilized. Witcher is not an exception here, its the norm. if you look at game specs for the last 3 years youll see this tendency in most titles (except poor console ports).
Olas said:
Winter is the best time to play demanding games I find.
And im just sitting here playing a now 9 years old Company of Heroes.....
Sleekit said:
key question is...at least for me...does it actually need that many cores ?
I cant say for certain, but jusging from what material we have concerning games graphics it does look like it could actually need those requirements. Which is much better than, say, The Crew that ran abysmally on top end hardware without having significant looks.
ryukage_sama said:
I have the Nvidia GTX 660, and I'm looking at upcoming PC games that are demanding more. Hell, the PS4 barely meets the minimum GPU specs for the game. Has PC optimization gone completely out of fashion, or are CD Projekt's standards for recommendation just extremely high?
PS4 does not meet the minimum requirements. Real world performance puts PS4
bellow a 480gtx.
PC optiomization gone out of fashion when it comes to Ubisoft games, but then, it was never in fashion for them. Witcher however does look like it could put that power to use actually. Witcher games have always been graphically impressive and demanding, while not as groundbreaking as the first Crysis game, they had thier fair share of "gota upgrade for that game" people.
gmaverick019 said:
woof. when this game drops, global warming is going to rise from all the towers running in overdrive trying to play this game
Luckily, Keplars are not going to be able to run it, and if you know how hot those run you may forget about global warming from others in comparison
Charcharo said:
Remember Kids, minimum and recommended specs are ALMOST CERTAINLY a bit exaggerated.
This might VERY well be such a case.
Depends on what your aim is. If your aim is to play the game no matter what - a 8600. gs in a laptop can technically play GTA4 (i did it!). If your aim is to play at minimum 1080p at 60fps with no framerate drops at any point (or even 144fps if you own a fancy monitor) then youll likely have to exceed the specs. What would be AWESOME to know is the machine settings they tested for those specs. did they test the game at, say, 1080p or 1440p or 4k when determining specs? without this information its not possible to know if min specs are applicable to you.
Adam Jensen said:
I don't get why people go for i7 though. You don't really need it for gaming. Xeon is about $20 more expensive than the i5 and it's basically an i7 without an integrated GPU which gamers don't need anyway. And it can't be overclocked. That's what puts off a lot of people. But when you think about it, it's not actually a big deal unless you want bragging rights, since all the games that require an i7 are made to run at stock speed just fine. And you're getting a server grade CPU designed to run 24/7. It's more stable than an i7. You also save money by not having to buy an aftermarket cooler. I'm going to sell my AMD FX-8350 rig and get myself a Xeon E3-1231-v3 before this thing comes out. YOLO!!!
While Xeon no doubt can play games decently, its important to remmeber that it is a serverrack CPU with nonstandard socket which means that you have to tailor your entire tower after it, meanwhile I7 will just fit in your regular run off the mill mobo and other parts no fuss.
I actually bought a I5-4670 because i5 is enough for my needs anyway. Notice the lack of K at the end of it - i dont care about overclocking anyway.
Im not sure if stability is a big factor here. it is for server machines but for a regular gamer? i havent had a problem with CPU stability in a decade.
lordloss217 said:
I got 4GB of ram (soon to be 8GB) running at 1600mhz, a I5-4460 and a GTX 750 that has 1GB of memory.
could I run this game on windowed with little AA?
P.S I do have a ps4 but I prefer 60fps if possible.
If you get those 8GB of ram yes. a 750 is quite unique beast is that it isnt just a rebranded 660 that would usually be the case (nvidia rebrands like a mosnter). Its actually new and great technology. a 750 should be able to run it just fine if your not going for "Everything maxed" options.
Youll be fine unless your running large resolutions which is whre your 1gb of Vram is going to fail.
Charcharo said:
Even Shadow Of Mordor lies in its requirements. It does not need 6 GB VRAM for Ultra. It runs on 4GB RAM + 5770 too... Fairly well even, 60 fps Low 900p.
Two things why shadow of mordor doesnt lie:
Firs to all your testing at subnormal resolutions - 900p. requirements are made as a minimum for 1080p nowadays. so you got a much lower demand due to lower resolution in comparison.
secondly, Shadow of Mordor DOES use 6gb of VRAM if you use the ultra texture pack. however if your machine does not have that much VRAM it will start using regular ram for VRAM purposes to compensate for it, which is why you see it run fine on machines that dont have as much VRAM. they made a fail-safe for them and it worked.