The release of the popular action adventure God of War on the PC is slowly approaching. The game, which was originally released on PS4 in 2018, will bring a lot of improvements on the new platform in the form of better shadows, reflections, ambient occlusion, but we will also see support for various technologies such as DLSS and Reflex from Nvidia or FSR from AMD. We’ve known all this for some time, but today we’ve seen a new trailer and information about it hardware requirements.
The developers divided them into 5 categories, taking you the minimum will definitely be met by most players. All you have to do is prepare a Nvidia GTX 960 or AMD R9 290 graphics card, plus an Intel i5-2500K or AMD Ryzen 3 1200 and 8 GB of RAM. In that case, however you have to come to terms with today’s ridiculously low 720p resolution at 30 FPS, all with low detail.
On the other side of the spectrum is the ultra setting (4K resolution, 60 FPS and maximum detail). You will already need to prepare an Nvidia RTX 3080 or AMD RX 6800 XT card, and as an Intel i9-9900K or AMD Ryzen 9 3950X processor. In terms of RAM capacity, twice that is recommended, ie 16 GB.
Paradoxically, the golden mean is the requirements called “high”. These take into account the resolution of Full HD at 60 FPS and the details set to “original” (probably the quality as on the PS4 version of the game). To do this, you will need a Nvidia GTX 1070 or AMD RX 5600 XT graphics card, an Intel i7-4770K or AMD Ryzen 7 2700 processor, and as with minimum requirements, you will only need 8 GB of RAM.
As for the size of the game, it’s definitely not small, it will take a bite out of the disc 70 GB. In addition, the developers recommend SSD, which is slowly becoming the standard. See the table above.
God of War will be released on PC on January 14, 2022. It will be available at Steam a EGS.
Watch the all-new God of War PC Features Trailer and get excited to go #RTXOn with NVIDIA DLSS and Reflex on January 14th, 2022.
Recommended Specs & More –> https://t.co/0EzLX8an9E pic.twitter.com/O3ZE6uI2VE
– NVIDIA GeForce (@NVIDIAGeForce) December 8, 2021
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