Spectre Divide System Requirements
Spectre Divide system requirements 2024 - can your PC run Spectre Divide?
Spectre Divide minimum requirements
- Memory: 8 GB
- Graphics Card: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti
- CPU: Intel Core i5-12400T
- File Size: 20 GB
- OS: Windows 10 Home
Spectre Divide recommended specs
Unknown recommended system requirements
Can you run it? Test your computer against Spectre Divide system requirements.
Can I Run Spectre Divide?
An Intel Core i5-12400T CPU is required at a minimum to run Spectre Divide. The cheapest graphics card you can play it on is an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1080 Ti. The minimum memory requirement for Spectre Divide is 8GB installed in your computer. In terms of Spectre Divide file size, you will need at least 20GB available.
Spectre Divide will run on PC system with Windows 10 Home and upwards.
Looking for an upgrade? Try our easy to use Spectre Divide set up guides to find the best cards. Filter for Spectre Divide graphics card comparison and CPU compare. We'll help you find the best deal for the right gear to run the game.
Spectre Divide FPS - what frame rate can you expect?
How many FPS will I get on Spectre Divide? We reference thousands of reports from PCGameBenchmark users running our FPS tracking app to tell you exactly how Spectre Divide performs across a range of different settings and resolutions on the most popular PC gaming setups.
What frame rate does Spectre Divide run at?
Here are the typical frame rate samples
Avg FPS | CPU | GPU | RAM |
158 | Intel Core i9-9900K | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2070 | 16 GB |
88 | Intel Core i5-10400 | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 | 16 GB |
74 | Intel Xeon | NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 SUPER | 32 GB |
67 | Intel Core i7-10700 | NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti | 16 GB |
What frame rate does Spectre Divide run at? Check our FPS Calculator
Are you experiencing Spectre Divide FPS drops and stutters? Want to know exactly how the game performs on your system? You can get a free easy FPS test for all your games using the PCGameBenchmark FPS monitor tool - your first step to understanding how the parts in your gaming PC are actually performing in real-world conditions.