F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming What are your most challenging video games?

What are your most challenging video games?

What are your most challenging video games?

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yalo29
Senior Member
641
01-24-2024, 01:59 AM
#11
I'm a bit gray-bearded and a bit confused, but I'm curious—will it work with Crysis? Lol.
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yalo29
01-24-2024, 01:59 AM #11

I'm a bit gray-bearded and a bit confused, but I'm curious—will it work with Crysis? Lol.

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Zach072999
Junior Member
29
01-30-2024, 03:11 PM
#12
I'm currently playing Cyberpunk, which is known for being the most challenging title on my list. It runs smoothly at 70 to 90 FPS, but it's the one that uses the most of my system resources. My setup includes an i3-13100F with 16GB RAM, an AORUS GTX 1080 Ti, and I always play games at 1080p. Other titles perform well at full settings, often exceeding 90 FPS consistently.
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Zach072999
01-30-2024, 03:11 PM #12

I'm currently playing Cyberpunk, which is known for being the most challenging title on my list. It runs smoothly at 70 to 90 FPS, but it's the one that uses the most of my system resources. My setup includes an i3-13100F with 16GB RAM, an AORUS GTX 1080 Ti, and I always play games at 1080p. Other titles perform well at full settings, often exceeding 90 FPS consistently.

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kefkef5000
Member
102
02-02-2024, 04:09 PM
#13
My top demanding title in my Steam collection is Cyberpunk. Someone suggested getting the Phantom Liberty DLC before playing it for the first time. I experimented with various settings, and my setup works best with medium options at 4K resolution and basic ray tracing enabled. This gives me smooth performance above 60 fps without relying on DLSS. The game looks fine. I intend to purchase Phantom Liberty soon so I can finally experience it. At the time of this review, I was only about five minutes in, testing its performance on my desktop. I’m pleased I delayed playing because I recall reading about the game’s issues at launch. It’s astonishing they even attempted a PlayStation 4 release. I just checked the release date and realized it was December 2020—four years ago? That’s quite a gap! How could the experience have been so poor on the available hardware?
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kefkef5000
02-02-2024, 04:09 PM #13

My top demanding title in my Steam collection is Cyberpunk. Someone suggested getting the Phantom Liberty DLC before playing it for the first time. I experimented with various settings, and my setup works best with medium options at 4K resolution and basic ray tracing enabled. This gives me smooth performance above 60 fps without relying on DLSS. The game looks fine. I intend to purchase Phantom Liberty soon so I can finally experience it. At the time of this review, I was only about five minutes in, testing its performance on my desktop. I’m pleased I delayed playing because I recall reading about the game’s issues at launch. It’s astonishing they even attempted a PlayStation 4 release. I just checked the release date and realized it was December 2020—four years ago? That’s quite a gap! How could the experience have been so poor on the available hardware?

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BO3ZOCKER01
Junior Member
10
02-06-2024, 12:18 AM
#14
My 3080 handled FFXV smoothly at 4K with high settings, including Nvidia options like shadow libs and hair effects. No need for DLSS—especially since the game still suffers from its old DLSS 1.0. For Cyberpunk 2077, using mods for better graphics plus path tracing pushes performance past 60 FPS. But it always looks great.
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BO3ZOCKER01
02-06-2024, 12:18 AM #14

My 3080 handled FFXV smoothly at 4K with high settings, including Nvidia options like shadow libs and hair effects. No need for DLSS—especially since the game still suffers from its old DLSS 1.0. For Cyberpunk 2077, using mods for better graphics plus path tracing pushes performance past 60 FPS. But it always looks great.

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NikoMash
Senior Member
335
02-06-2024, 04:11 AM
#15
I’m currently immersed in Alan Wake 2 and a brand-new Indiana Jones experience. Both games have their advanced options fully enabled—path tracing, DLSS, and other settings are cranked to 4K.
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NikoMash
02-06-2024, 04:11 AM #15

I’m currently immersed in Alan Wake 2 and a brand-new Indiana Jones experience. Both games have their advanced options fully enabled—path tracing, DLSS, and other settings are cranked to 4K.

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CynicalUhcakip
Junior Member
16
02-06-2024, 04:42 AM
#16
Children fixated on frame rates... A tough game should test your brain and encourage real thought. Seeking a test? Give Zork a try. https://classicreload.com/zork-i.html Half the fun comes from crafting questions and you’ll need graph paper to sketch maps. You must rely on your mind and creativity for those striking visuals. I’ve encountered many attractive, demanding titles that are completely mindless. To be honest, the most demanding system game I own right now is likely the original Evil Genius. But honestly, I adjusted the settings, boosted the zoom, and set the max population to 500. Zooming out with hundreds of enemies running around really tests the CPU. You can achieve similar performance in modern visually intensive games by raising population limits and playing six players on a map. Modern games with heavy graphics usually handle it well. Hogwarts works smoothly at around 70-100 FPS with high settings. The only improvements I see are more VRAM, fewer swaps, and lower CPU load. i5-12600KF, GTX 2060, 32 GB DDR4-3600, Samsung SSD
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CynicalUhcakip
02-06-2024, 04:42 AM #16

Children fixated on frame rates... A tough game should test your brain and encourage real thought. Seeking a test? Give Zork a try. https://classicreload.com/zork-i.html Half the fun comes from crafting questions and you’ll need graph paper to sketch maps. You must rely on your mind and creativity for those striking visuals. I’ve encountered many attractive, demanding titles that are completely mindless. To be honest, the most demanding system game I own right now is likely the original Evil Genius. But honestly, I adjusted the settings, boosted the zoom, and set the max population to 500. Zooming out with hundreds of enemies running around really tests the CPU. You can achieve similar performance in modern visually intensive games by raising population limits and playing six players on a map. Modern games with heavy graphics usually handle it well. Hogwarts works smoothly at around 70-100 FPS with high settings. The only improvements I see are more VRAM, fewer swaps, and lower CPU load. i5-12600KF, GTX 2060, 32 GB DDR4-3600, Samsung SSD

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gooddoog
Junior Member
6
02-06-2024, 09:28 AM
#17
trainz railroad simulator 2022 fun. At full speed with 30-60 frames per second, your GPU and CPU are drawing around 330 watts and 60 watts respectively.
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gooddoog
02-06-2024, 09:28 AM #17

trainz railroad simulator 2022 fun. At full speed with 30-60 frames per second, your GPU and CPU are drawing around 330 watts and 60 watts respectively.

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Dark_NightHD
Member
154
02-09-2024, 01:30 AM
#18
Looking unsure about whether I've addressed this subject yet, but I'll try. For me, it's SCP:SL because of poor optimization, Helldivers 2, and Dark and Darker.
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Dark_NightHD
02-09-2024, 01:30 AM #18

Looking unsure about whether I've addressed this subject yet, but I'll try. For me, it's SCP:SL because of poor optimization, Helldivers 2, and Dark and Darker.

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