Skip to main content

Don’t think consoles have changed the requirements of PC games? Have a look for yourself

consoles have changed pc requirements assassins creed unity ww2 machinegun 1415412327
For better or worse, new cross-platform titles like Assassin's Creed: Unity put aging PC hardware to the test Image used with permission by copyright holder
The controversy surrounding my article about how consoles have increased system requirements in PC games exceeded anything I could have predicted. My claim was simple; if you have a system that’s getting on in years, such as one with a dual-core processor and/or a video card with 2GB of VRAM or less, some of the newest cross-platform games will challenge your rig. PC gamers are no longer guaranteed the flawless experience they’ve become accustomed to with previous cross-platform ports.

This assertion is indisputably supported by the facts. While I could write a separate benchmark post, there’s really no need, as other reputable sites have already tested these games more extensively than I could.

Sites that back up my claims include:

And so on.

Of these high-profile holiday blockbusters only Advanced Warfare runs alright on older systems, though it too chokes on mid-range mobile GPUs that are a couple generations old. The others demand recent hardware. Anandtech found that even the AMD Radeon R9 280 barely hits 30FPS at medium detail and 1080p resolution in Assassin’s Creed: Unity while Notebookcheck.net found Dragon Age: Inquisition won’t exceed 30FPS at 1080p and high detail on anything less than a GTX 770M paired with an Intel mobile quad.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

The end of the last console generation created an environment where even low-end hardware could handle any port at 30FPS and 720p resolution (the maximum typical of the last-gen consoles). Playing at 1080p was usually no sweat, even at maximum or near-maximum detail. That era is over. Going forward, PC gamers will need more powerful hardware to obtain the performance they’re accustomed to seeing. This situation will likely continue for several years.

These findings are not the same as declaring PCs are less powerful or can’t handle games, a statement many commenters put in my mouth. It’s clear that a powerful computer is faster than any console. But, as highlighted by the Steam hardware survey, not everyone can afford a powerful computer. For those on a budget the change in typical system requirements is meaningful.

And this is not an unusual turn of events. The same trend occurred with the release of the Xbox 360/PS3. It’s more relevant now, though, because cross-platform releases have become the rule rather than an exception. While some might contend the change has nothing to do with consoles, that’s a hard claim to take seriously given the sudden leap has occurred just after the release of new console hardware, and the lack of any innovation on the PC side that would spur such advancement.

Editors' Recommendations

Matthew S. Smith
Matthew S. Smith is the former Lead Editor, Reviews at Digital Trends. He previously guided the Products Team, which dives…
Please, don’t buy an AMD GPU right now
RX 7900 XTX slotted into a test bench.

It's basically a foregone conclusion that Nvidia is launching new Super GPUs next week at CES. We have no official announcement from Nvidia, outside of a keynote presentation at the event, but a mountain of evidence shows that Team Green may be gearing up to launch three new graphics cards. But what about Team Red?

We have heard murmurs that AMD is set to launch a budget-focused RX 7600 XT soon, but the rumor mill has been quiet about a slate of new graphics cards. Even with a pile of graphics cards in stock at reasonable prices and few indications that AMD is going to upend its GPU lineup, it's best to wait a couple of weeks before picking up a new AMD GPU.
Super AMD GPUs? Unlikely

Read more
A look back at the best (and worst) PC games I tested in 2023
Cyberpunk 2077 on the Samsung Odyssey OLED G8.

I test the performance and features of dozens of new PC games every year. It's usually just a way to round up some optimized settings for the latest games, but 2023 challenged that approach. It was a notoriously troublesome year for PC releases, but for as many busted ports that we saw, I tested just as many technical marvels.

If you want to push your PC to its limits with the most demanding PC games, here are the games you should play -- and the ones you should avoid. Just to be clear -- this isn't a comment on the content of the games themselves, but on how they performed on PC and implemented (or didn't) the latest features.
The best PC games I tested in 2023
Alan Wake 2

Read more
I built the best gaming PC in the world — and it wasn’t worth it
Jon's latest gaming and work machine.

Bonus points if you spot the LED gloved-hand reflection. Jon Martindale / DigitalTrends

I love PC hardware. I've been researching it, building it, tweaking it, and writing about it for 20 years and I still get just as excited by the latest generation of CPUs as I did when I put together my first PC in my teens.

Read more