Suspicious Crysis System Requirements Released

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Much to the dismay of the wallets of many a gamer whose PCs teeter on the edges of obsolescence, developer Crytek has released the official system requirements and recommended specs for its upcoming PC graphical powerhouse shooter Crysis (check out our recent single-player and multiplayer coverage).

At the bare minimum, gamers must sport an Intel Pentium 4 at 2.8GHz, an Intel Core at 2.0GHz, or an AMD Athlon 2800+--with the clock speeds upped to 3.2GHz, 2.2GHz, and 3200+ respectively for Vista users--and 1GB of RAM, or 1.5GB for Vista. Video cards must have 256MB of memory and be at least of the NVidia GeForce 6800 GT or ATI Radeon 9800 Pro chipsets, with Vista-owning ATI users requiring at least a Radeon X800 Pro. Finally, Crysis will consume 12GB of hard drive space.

Those who have played the Crysis multiplayer beta may find their minds boggled by the claims made by the above requirements; though admittedly not final software, the beta suggests that the listed requirements are, to say the least, impractical for playing Crysis.

As far as what Crytek recommends: an Intel Core 2 DUO at 2.2GHz or AMD Athlon 64 X2 4400+, 2GB of RAM, and an NVidia GeForce 8800 GTS/640; as Crytek is a technology partner with NVidia, no ATI equivalent was explicitly stated.

This January, Crysis lead designer Jack Mamais told Shacknews that Crysis would be "even more" scalable than the studio's Far Cry was at the time of its 2004 release. "A three year old graphics card should be pretty good," he said.

Indeed, today's announcement claims Crysis is "playable on gaming rigs up to 2-3 years old," which is likely to be more of a technical truism than an appraisal of the situation in practical terms for most gamers.

Crytek CEO Cevat Yerli acknowledged the game's demanding nature in today's announcement. "While these specs affect how Crysis will perform now, we have also optimized Crysis so that the game scales forward 1-2 years," he explained. "We want to make sure that Crysis' gameplay, visuals and performance improves as technology does."

In a matter of weeks, NVidia plans to detail a line of Crysis-capable, DirectX 10-compatible graphics cards spanning a range of budgets. Crytek is also expected to release a public demo of Crysis prior to the game's November 16 release date.

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From The Chatty
  • reply
    October 9, 2007 12:03 PM

    Seems about right with everything on low

    • reply
      October 9, 2007 12:11 PM

      Yeah, low on the recommended system maybe. Minimum generally means what you need to run it, not what you need to make it run decently. I tried the beta on medium with everything meeting the recommended specs except for my video card, which is between the minimum and recommended (7800GTX), and got pretty poor FPS; granted I was using 1600x1200. While it was beta, it doesn't seem like they have a lot of time to optimize it too much more before release.

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