B.Ob. Posted February 2, 2006 Share Posted February 2, 2006 Oblivion Minimum System Requirements and more What are the PC system requirements? New! Recommended: * 3 Ghz Intel Pentium 4 or equivalent processor * 1 GB System RAM * ATI X800 series, Nvidia GeForce 6800 series, or higher video card Minimum System Requirements: * Windows XP * 512MB System RAM * 2 Ghz Intel Pentium 4 or equivalent processor * 128MB Direct3D compatible video card * and DirectX 9.0 compatible driver; * 8x DVD-ROM drive * 4.6 GB free hard disk space * DirectX 9.0c (included) * DirectX 8.1 compatible sound card * Keyboard, Mouse Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
B.Ob. Posted February 17, 2006 Author Share Posted February 17, 2006 Oblivion: Shader or texture heavy? Interesting discussion there on how well the 7800gs, x800xl and x1600 might do in Oblivion. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
B.Ob. Posted March 2, 2006 Author Share Posted March 2, 2006 Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion went gold and will ship on March 20th. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
B.Ob. Posted April 25, 2006 Author Share Posted April 25, 2006 Elder Scrolls, Oblivion looks great, makes X1900 XTX squeal "Our friends at Pcinpact already informed us about the noise of ATIs X1900 XTX in this game and we managed to confirm it. Radeon X1900 XTX will get very noisy at high resolution such as 1600x1200 4X FSAA plus HDR. They did a video and you can check the difference at this link." Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
B.Ob. Posted April 27, 2006 Author Share Posted April 27, 2006 Oblivion Athlon 64 CPU Performance "Bethesda has claimed that Oblivion takes advantage of today’s latest dual-core processors, making it one of the first games on the market to take advantage of this feature out-of-the-box, no patches are necessary. We were curious to see how much of an impact dual-core CPUs have on performance, if any. In addition, we’ve also run CPU scaling tests over a wide range of clock speeds, as well as L2 cache tests, to see how much of a performance improvement processors with a larger 1MB L2 cache has on performance." The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion GPU Performance "The first test is our Oblivion Gate benchmark, which just so happens to be the most stressful out of all three. In this test we've spotted an Oblivion gate in The Great Forest and walk towards it as scamps attempt to attack our character. The benchmark takes place in a heavily wooded area with lots of grass; combined with the oblivion gate itself, even the fastest GPUs will have trouble breaking 30 fps here." Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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