Technical validation of official requirements based on the latest parts. A technical database that derives the optimal title for your PC configuration from professional selection and grading.
Surprisingly lightweight: locks 60fps at 1080p/Medium on recommended specs and breezes through Ultra on high-end gear.
The RE Engine's incredible optimization means even entry-level GPUs can run it. Step up to a mid-range card or better, and ray tracing or high-res gaming is fully on the table.
Comfortable even on midrange hardware—but CPU/GPU balance matters.
Civ VII still heavily taxes your CPU late-game, but massive visual upgrades mean you can't neglect your GPU. Balance your build.
Actually, the system requirements are exactly the same as the sequel, Horizon Forbidden West. It's an older title, but the hardware demands are definitely not low.
While a PS4/PS5 native, the PC port is masterfully optimized to the point of being fully playable even on handheld.
Official mid-range specs run fine, but the heavy open-world/NPC logic demands a beefier CPU than recommended.
Heavier than the Zero Dawn Remastered due to the 'Burning Shores' DLC. Treat the official specs as the bare minimum and aim a tier higher.
A massive performance hog that dwarfs its predecessor. A mid-range GPU is your absolute baseline, and a high-end CPU is non-negotiable for a smooth experience.
Even mid-range GPUs from a few generations back can lock in 60fps at 1080p High. But if you want 4K or Ray Tracing, you need a higher-tier card with a hefty VRAM buffer.
The Director's Cut pushes harder than the original. Don't skimp on your GPU, tune your 'Streaming Memory,' and you're set for the ultimate porter experience.
To maximize stability, aim for a GPU above official recommendations paired with a mid-to-high tier CPU, 32GB of RAM, and an NVMe SSD.
Comfortable performance on specs a tier below World—and several tiers below Wilds.
Major updates have hiked the system requirements, yet the game remains surprisingly scalable—even playable on handhelds. That said, if you’re chasing peak visuals, be warned: this is one of the most punishing heavyweights in PC gaming.
It's surprisingly easy to run, but the hardware demands scale aggressively depending on your target resolution and framerate.
An entry-level rig will easily hit the 60fps cap at 1080p, but pushing 4K or max settings absolutely requires a mid-range GPU or better.
On a modern PC, World feels far smoother and sharper than it did at launch—and it remains a classic that’s still very playable even with budget used parts.
Perfectly optimized and flexible. High-end visuals scale beautifully, but Ray Tracing still carries a heavy hardware tax.