![]() Combine that with a 7950 for under $200, to top that off you could even mine cryptocurrencies and let your GPU help you pay for upgrades. Both sandy and Ivy are fully capable of playing anything out there today and can be had at a fraction of new haswells costs. ![]() You can pick up some quality second hand parts from people who upgraded from sandy bridge or ivy bridge to haswell. Or get a cheap build today, and an entirely overhauled build when star citizen is released. If you are on such a budget, why not live with what you have now, and save the upgrade for a year or two. I simply cannot recommend any build with today's hardware. With that said, Star Citizen aims at destroying the next generation of CPU and GPU's, it will be the title to really push the limits and raise the bar in terms of hardware. If that turns out to be the case, in two years an 8 core amd cpu *should* last longer than a 4 core 4770k. Star Citizen, and potentially the future of PC gaming is heading towards multi-thread optimized games which will take advantage of an 8 core cpu. While the architecture on amd's cpu isn't as fast, on multi-threaded applications it's tough to beat. A game like Star Citizen will most definitely utilize an 8 core cpu. ![]() I might go with an AMD 8350 because it has 8 cores. I recall seeing somewhere that the best system for SC right now is a 5 GHz six core Intel with 32 GB of RAM and a Nvidia 1080 or better. When I overclock my 5960X to 4.1 GHz from 3.3 it makes a difference. Having enough RAM and a fast six core CPU has more effect on speed. If you had to build this computer today and hope that it runs an extremely demanding game due out in nearly 2 years. My Nvidia 1080 Ti runs Star Citizen at the same speed at 4K or at 2560x1440. Pilot spaceships, farm for resources, race, even board a ship for first-person shooter action.I'm planning on waiting on the graphics card upgrade, but I need to build a new PC, so I'm looking to find the best CPU I can atm, (not extreme editions) because I'm going to be at uni in 2 years, and not be able to afford to build another one. Star Citizen is an incredibly ambitious space combat sim in which the plan is you can go anywhere, do anything, and be anyone. The latest high-end GeForce GTX 1000 Series or AMD's Radeon Fury graphics cards are needed to get Star Citizen looking its finest. As the game is still in development, these minimum and recommended specifications may change in the future. ![]() Below are the system requirements to run Star Citizen on your PC, as well as recommendations for a better experience exploring the 'verse. The sky is the limit here, so the better the graphics card and CPU you can throw at Star Citizen, the nicer it will look and the better the performance will be.The system requirements for Star Citizen are in a constant state of flux as development progresses. As of Star Citizen Alpha 3.17: Fueling Fortunes, the game will require DirectX 11.1 or later. Running on the high-end CryTek engine, Star Citizen's system requirements are very high. Star Citizen is still in development but is currently one of the most demanding games on PC. NVidia GeForce GTX 980 4GB / AMD Radeon R9 390 NVidia GeForce GTX 680 / AMD Radeon HD 7970 Intel Core i7-5960X 8-Core 3.0GHz / AMD FX-9590 Necessary PC requirements CPU, Quad Core CPU RAM, 16GB+ RAM GPU, DirectX 11 Graphics Card with 2GB RAM (4GB strongly recommended) DX, DirectX 11 Operating. Intel Core i5-2500K 3.3GHz / AMD Phenom II X4 940 ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |