Install Steam
login
|
language
简体中文 (Simplified Chinese)
繁體中文 (Traditional Chinese)
日本語 (Japanese)
한국어 (Korean)
ไทย (Thai)
Български (Bulgarian)
Čeština (Czech)
Dansk (Danish)
Deutsch (German)
Español - España (Spanish - Spain)
Español - Latinoamérica (Spanish - Latin America)
Ελληνικά (Greek)
Français (French)
Italiano (Italian)
Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesian)
Magyar (Hungarian)
Nederlands (Dutch)
Norsk (Norwegian)
Polski (Polish)
Português (Portuguese - Portugal)
Português - Brasil (Portuguese - Brazil)
Română (Romanian)
Русский (Russian)
Suomi (Finnish)
Svenska (Swedish)
Türkçe (Turkish)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamese)
Українська (Ukrainian)
Report a translation problem
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=385eG1IEZMU
Since 2 weeks ago I was on a GTX 1050Ti and Ryzen 5 1400. I have put over 500hrs into RDR2 (mostly online) with this setup.
It is absolutely playable with decent FPS while still looking awesome on 1080p.
Put textures on high or ultra and play with the other settings, especially the advanced volumetric settings and water physics.
I can't tell you my exact FPS since steam overlay didn't work too well for me with this game but from my experience it felt like 30-40 FPS most of the time.
Summary: When you are used to 30+ FPS gaming and put in some testing with the advanced settings you will have a great looking experience that still feels smooth.
My old card, I finished the game on this and yeah was ok. TBH here it was this game that made me decide I needed an upgrade.
My old GTX 1060 ROG ran pretty much everything I threw at it with most settings on high to ultra@ 1080p but when I find a game that it struggles with its a sign of things to come and that its getting long in the tooth so grabbed a RTX card as the prices dropped rapidly due to 30 series.
30-25 fps medium high
Edit: And with only 8 gig o ram.