On 1080p I would say it would be fine? Just don't expect to play everything maxed out.
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This. What primarily uses up the space is:
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textures (twice the size, four times the storage) and having a colour / bump / reflectivity / emmisivity / diffusivity / &c texture for every surface
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shadow maps - (most) lights have a high-resolution texture associated with them, see how far they 'shine' in every direction before they hit something. Modern games have a lot of lights
Turn down texture and shadow quality, watch your GPU RAM usage drop right off.
Don't expect to play everything maxed out
Nah, my aim has always been smooth/high framerates over "ultra" settings so I don't have worries about that sort of thing. Never been an "eye candy" kind of guy.
shadow maps
This I didn't know, I thought that textures were the main thing that really made GPUs choke nowadays, given how devs are obsessed with things like 8K textures and whatnot.
Still, good to see that I didn't buy an useless card for today's gaming, or at least I think so. I run Gundam Battle Operation 2 perfectly fine and stable so far.
I guess it depends on what kind of games they're gonna play, too. I think for Indies, non triple-A and older games this PC will do just fine. The thing with PC gaming nowadays is that there are so many choices, not everything is triple-A cutting edge games.
also i5, but 9th gen - 32gb ddr4. previous gpu was a 970, now I use a 1650, both 4gb vram. havent had any issues myself, though I do need to decrease some gfx settings occasionally to improve performance.
This f
I game on an Nvidia GTX 970ti and it still keeps chugging along. As long as you are merely trying to get games to run, not necessarily on high settings, you can get most games to work. Sometimes you need to make some sacrifices in terms of performance.
Digital Foundry has a really good video on PC settings: https://youtu.be/A8VrFUi79yo
They also have really good videos on… well, just about everything. Sometimes they have optimized settings for games as a good starting point.
I have an RX 570 4GB and an i3 8th gen. I'd say you can probably satisfy your gaming needs, I play Elden Ring on low settings on without problems, more than 60fps (I didn't benchmark it). I generally turn settings to low for every game and cap 60fps, to preserve my hardware, but you could probably turn up the settings without issues
There are plenty of games that will run just fine. Some modern AAA titles will probably not run with a playable frame rate. But that's certainly not a reason to not have fun.
4gb is going to be tight, if it's possible to find a 580 for a decent price, I'd do that instead
As someone that just came from an R9 380 2GB, further than me for sure. It made it about as far as No Man's Sky before it started really working hard. I got lucky and ran across the money I needed to upgrade but I was miserable trying to play anything there for awhile.
I had a 980 FE and it was begging for mercy, you can get good frames on 1080p, low settings, if your card has good cooler, so it won't turn into a grilling pan. But i would suggest upgrading even with a second hand part (i got myself a second hand palit 3070 jet stream, it is a trooper, but the cooler can't keep up with the heat at times.) so yeah, that's that.
I should add games like csgo, fortnite, rainbow, gta v, rdr2, skyrim runs fine on a 4gb but still...