After the wildly profitable Battlefield 6 open beta that ran earlier in August, EA has launched the specs your PC might want to play the subsequent installment within the in style multiplayer shooter sequence.
There aren’t too many surprises on the specs record EA revealed in a blog post Thursday. Gamers with graphics cards as previous because the Nvidia GeForce RTX 2060 or AMD Radeon RX 5600 XT (launched in 2019 and 2020, respectively) with at the very least 6GB of digital RAM can play Battlefield 6. That is moderately inclusive for avid gamers operating on older PCs, although they will want at the very least 16GB of normal RAM and can solely have the ability to play in 1080p decision at 30 frames per second.
For 1440p gaming at 60 fps, the writer recommends gamers make use of the subsequent era of GPUs: at the very least an Nvidia GeForce RTX 3060 Ti or AMD Radeon RX 6700 XT with 8GB of VRAM. Gamers clamoring for body charges above 80 fps might should decrease their decision and graphics settings.
For peak settings of both 4K gaming at 60 fps or 1440p gaming at 144 fps, EA recommends at the very least an Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 or AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT with 16GB of VRAM. Avid gamers at this stage will want 32GB of normal RAM and extra highly effective CPUs, just like the Intel Core i9-12900k or AMD Ryzen 7 7900X3D, to keep away from bottlenecking.
Whereas not fairly as hefty as current Call of Duty set up sizes, Battlefield 6 would require 90GB of cupboard space at launch — or 55GB if operating minimal specs for 1080p gaming.
A reminder for gamers who did not dip into the open beta: To play Battlefield 6, you may must allow Safe Boot in your PC to work with EA’s new era of Javelin anti-cheat tech. That is not non-compulsory and requires altering settings in BIOS. It may be a fast course of for avid gamers with newer motherboards, although these with complicated or older setups can run into hassle. When EA began requiring Safe Boot to play Battlefield 2042 and others within the sequence again in Might, some players said they have been in a position to change simply whereas others took hours to repair their machines.
EA has posted a guide to enabling Safe Boot, which has a prolonged record of motherboards that gamers can search amongst to search out their gear’s model and step-by-step directions to make the change. The r/Battlefield subreddit additionally posted a Secure Boot megathread to assist gamers flip the function on.
It does not appear to be EA will budge on this requirement, so anybody desirous to play Battlefield 6 on its Oct. 10 launch day ought to allow Safe Boot to arrange. If that is a dealbreaker, Battlefield 6 may even be out there on PS5 and Xbox Collection X and S.

