From there onwards you can enable/disable things if you need more performance or demand even better game rendering quality. Games typically should be able to run in the 40 FPS range combined with your monitor resolution at the very least. We will test several modern age graphics cards in this D3D12 and D3D11 compatible title performance wise. These numbers will be lower with DLSS, so I'll be re-running - and running many more graphics cards through Battlefield 2042 when it officially launches.Tweet Image quality settings and benchmark systemįor this game, we use a run with Ultra image quality settings, the highest possible quality mode. Remember that the final release of Battlefield 2042 will have DLSS support, so you'll be able to enjoy 8K gaming with less VRAM being used, and 4K on Ultra without as much VRAM being eaten up. NVIDIA ships its GeForce RTX 3080 with 10GB of VRAM, and the GeForce RTX 3080 Ti with 12GB of VRAM. VRAM usage is pretty crazy, with 14.5GB+ of VRAM being used when native 8K is being run with the Ultra graphics preset.īattlefield 2042 Open Beta is still hard to run and chews through your VRAM framebuffer on the Medium preset, with around 12-13GB of VRAM being used, while 4K on the Ultra preset is still eating up 9.5-10GB+ of VRAM. I've left out the GeForce RTX 3080 Ti (which has 12GB of GDDR6X) and the GeForce RTX 3080 (10GB of GDDR6X) for now, but I'll re-run these tests when Battlefield 2042 launches and include many more cards, both with and without DLSS enabled.ĨK is harsh on every graphics card and in every game, which is why I ran it at not just the your-system-can't-handle-this Ultra preset but the Medium preset in the Battlefield 2042 Open Beta, too. The big deal here will be the inclusion of NVIDIA DLSS technology, which will see 8K gaming at probably 60FPS or so on the GeForce RTX 3090, and maybe the GeForce RTX 3080 Ti or GeForce RTX 3080 depending on how much VRAM that Battlefield 2042 eats up at 8K with DLSS on.įor now, I'm running just 4 graphics cards through Battlefield 2042 Open Beta at 8K: NVIDIA's flagship GeForce RTX 3090 which has 24GB of ultra-fast GDDR6X memory, and AMD's flagship Radeon RX 6900 XT which has 16GB of GDDR6 memory and 128MB of Infinity Cache.īut I'm also running AMD's other RDNA 2-based cards with 16GB of GDDR6 memory, which include the Radeon RX 6800 XT and Radeon RX 6800 graphics cards.
#1080P BATTLEFIELD V IMAGE PC#
Read more: Battlefield 2042 will have NVIDIA DLSS support, PC gamers rejoice.Don't take any of this data to the grave, as things will change quite massively between now and the final release. The 8K results are fascinating, as I'm really pushing the boundaries of VRAM at 8K in Battlefield 2042, where you'll need 12-16GB - preferably 16GB of VRAM.īattlefield 2042 Open Beta is by no means the final version and the performance and analysis of performance here is just playing around before the real game launches. I'm going to do things a little differently to normal, however, with some delicious 8K results of the Battlefield 2042 Open Beta before I pump out the 1080p, 1440p, and 4K results in the next couple of days.
#1080P BATTLEFIELD V IMAGE FULL#
I'm not going to judge the game until I'm a few weeks into the full retail release, but I thought I'd take a very early look at the performance of Battlefield 2042 and the current Open Beta.
But now we have Battlefield 2042 - it has been quite the ride, and as I said - putting Battlefield V and Battlefield 1 to the side, Battlefield 2042 is a blast so far.