Bobik wrote:High.
If seriously, they are quite high ATM and since there is quite long time till release I can not predict those requirements at release.
What I am sure with ATM is, that you would need at least 4Gb of FREE RAM, that means you'd better have 6 or 8 Gbs installed on your PC.
Video card I think anything above GTX 650 would be a comfort playing in most cases: http://www.videocardbenchmark.net/common_gpus.html
CPU something like i5, better i7, Quad core or above.
These a rough requirements I would recommend, but would be very happy to see some feedback from our alpha testers about their PC specs and gaming experience/smoothness.
Dracathio wrote:Alright I haven't looked much into the works of Graphics cards or Processors.
What I was told [I think maybe, or read when looking into upgrading my computer] is that when there isn't a dedicated graphics card any graphics that are being processed go through the processor and said processor turns into the "graphics card" which than takes up a lot of the processing power of the computer and forces it to over heat and than dead goes your computer.
I would figure after reading something like that, getting the right graphics card put into my desktop could increase it's processing and ram because the card I would figure if the right one counts as extra processing as well as RAM to enable the computer to deal with gaming far better and more smoothly.
Please correct me if I am wrong, because I do wish to learn a bit more about this whole processor & ram vs Graphics card.
Bobik wrote:Basicly dedicated video card is like computer inside your computer. It have its own CPU and its own RAM which are optimized for computing of graphics. If you don't have a dedicated video card, that means that all that load will be taken by you main CPU and RAM (IF you CPU can do that). In 99% of cases it is just slow or inefficient and dedicated video card is always appreciated.
Riboy98 wrote:What about my intel HD 4000? last test it work prety well.