![]() Even the medium quality preset looks pretty similar - a few less shadows, but that's about it. Going from high to ultra makes almost no difference visually (at least nothing you're likely to miss while actually playing Horizon Zero Dawn). Here's an image quality comparison of the four presets at 1080p. Going from maximum to minimum quality can basically double your framerate, at the cost of image fidelity. You can also disable shadows and anti-aliasing completely, which potentially boosts performance about 10% (mostly thanks to the lack of shadows), though the removal of shadows and AA definitely makes the game look worse. The Original (aka medium) preset improved performance another 23% for Nvidia and 20% for AMD, while the Favor Performance (aka low) preset increased performance 18% for the 2060 and 12% for the 5600 XT compared to the medium preset. ![]() Going from Ultimate Quality (aka ultra) to Favor Quality (aka high) improved performance by 23% on the RTX 2060 and 28% on the RX 5600 XT. The Preset option has the biggest impact since it adjusts all of the other settings. Performance comparisons are relative to the Ultimate Quality preset. For this discussion, we tested using a 6GB RTX 2060 Founders Edition and a 6GB RX 5600 XT at 1080p. Let's quickly run through the settings you can customize. It's as close as you're going to get to buttery-smooth 4K gaming at maxed-out settings, at least until the GeForce RTX 3090 and Big Navi land. If you're hoping to run at 4K with the Ultimate Quality preset, you'd best bring out the big guns, by which we mean an RTX 2080 Ti, which will still fall short of 60 fps. Horizon Zero Dawn Settings AnalysisĮven with a limited number of settings to tweak, several of the options don't really impact performance or visuals that much - it's the combination of all the settings that make for more substantial differences. ![]() Our experience is that many incompatibility problems occur due to old drivers and other software, and a clean install helps ensure consistency of results. We use 'clean' test PCs, so there aren't a bunch of background tasks, which means no browsers, no Discord or other chat applications, and basically nothing other than the game, Steam and drivers for the installed hardware. ![]() AMD's driver is game ready for Horizon Zero Dawn and Nvidia's technically isn't, but it didn't appear to matter. The i5-2500K and FX-6300 meet the minimum requirements, however, and they should be able to break 30 fps provided your GPU is up to snuff.įor testing, I cleaned out all old GPU drivers (via Display Driver Uninstaller) and installed the latest (at the time) versions: Nvidia 451.56 and AMD 20.8.1. If you're using an old second-gen Core i5 or AMD FX-series CPU (which I don't have access to), things might not be so rosy. Everything went okay at low to medium settings, meaning 30-45 fps, but anything more dropped below 30 fps - skipping the high and ultra presets on budget hardware is par for the course.Īs for CPUs, the game ran fine on a Core i3-9100 and Ryzen 5 3400G, but those are still reasonably powerful and modern processors. The game popped up a warning that my system didn't meet the minimum requirements, which I ignored. While the game says you’ll need a GPU with 3GB of VRAM, I managed to get a GTX 1050 (2GB) running okay at 30-45 fps at 1080p.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |