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Is there a service that I can use to check if my machine will be able to run a certain game?

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6 Answers 6

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For Windows 7 / Vista you can use the Windows Experience Index score.

Or, for a more precise estimate, you can use "Can You Run it?":

https://www.systemrequirementslab.com/

This runs as a Java Applet that will actually benchmark your system and compare it to the performance of the game.

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    Wow, thanks man! That place is really good for the stuff I need!
    – glasnt
    Commented Jul 8, 2010 at 0:30
  • It's still my number one place to go for questions like these. It's at least a good indication of whether it will run decent or not.
    – Mast
    Commented Feb 3, 2015 at 19:44
  • Any similar sites that work for Linux based systems?
    – Twisty
    Commented Jan 9, 2018 at 1:09
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Demos, though increasingly rare (and massive) can be a good way to verify compatibility. Just remember that a prerelease demo may be poorly optimized compared to the final game.

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  • Demos may be becoming rarer, but 'Alphas' and 'Betas' are taking their place, although the same logic applies: an Alpha/Beta version of a game may be poorly optimized compared to the final game.
    – Robotnik
    Commented Jan 5, 2016 at 2:00
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    I've noticed this trend. It's rather odd as it used to be that a demo is a final but not always feature complete release or time limited use. Now also look for 'early access' as well as beta, alpha. As a rule of thumb of programming, optimization is done last and so most alpha and even beta version will not be well optimized. If you can run a beta then you should be golden. If beta won't run don't assume final won't.
    – ydobonebi
    Commented Jan 5, 2016 at 15:11
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Most modern PC games will publish the recommended at minimum system requirements at some point in time before the game is released. For example, the game Witcher 3, released in North America on May 19th, 2015, released their system requirements in early January of 2015.

The System Requirements Lab linked by John Gietzen is an excellent resource, but if you are unable or unwilling to run that applet, the publishers' minimum requirements will be a good place to start.

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    That said, System Requirements lab gives you a much greater depth of analysis. I have had experience in the past where the game would document the requirements to run the game, but you would never consider the game to be playable. This is more the case with online shooters, especially, where the game will still lag considerably, making it impossible to compete with other players. SystemLabs also provides more accurate provision for graphic cards, although I interpret this from general confusion that you are only trying to meet the dedicated memory requirements, which is not the case.
    – user106385
    Commented Jun 20, 2016 at 1:38
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Can I run it? vs. Is it playable?

There is a significant difference between these two questions, even though they are often conflated. Here are some specific reasons why a computer might not be able to run a game. Even when you don't run into these, a game might still not be playable. For example, you could clock the chip in your modern pc down to 500 MHz and still technically run any game program, but not at any reasonably playable speed for most recently published titles.

Rapid development of hardware means that on an older machine typically the hardware won't support all the functions the game demands of it. With increasing complexity of modern hardware and an increasing amount of pc configurations out there, it can be difficult for a developer to properly check for the availability of functionality and provide useful error messages. In particular older and lower budget titles are more likely to simply crash when encountering an internal error; assuming that calls to the game engine, graphics libraries or the OS simply succeed.

  • Insufficient hard drive space.

If there isn't enough space to store the game, it can't be run.

  • Out of memory.

Games typically just assume that they will receive whatever memory requested from the OS. Once the OS says 'no', because it ran out of both memory and swap file space, the game usually unceremoniously crashes. Or, on linux, some other process might request memory leading to the OOMkiller terminating the game before it can crash itself.

This is more complicated when it comes to games where the player 'creates' things, like tycoon games. Some of these can be potentially unlimited in scope, in which case the game eventually won't run on any machine, or the size of the map that can be run depends on the available memory.

  • Unsupported CPU instructions.

The X86 instruction set is not the same as it was in the 1980s. Newer models of chips keep adding more instructions to it. Thus, a game executable might crash if ran on a CPU that is too old. Typically games are compiled with alternate instruction paths if stuff such as vectorization extensions are unable, so this is a rarity.

  • Unsupported DirectX/OpenGL/Vulkan feature set.

When a graphics library call results in an error, it usually causes a game to not run at all and crash. Games are usually shipped with a particular edition of DirectX/OpenGL, and the maximum feature level for a graphics card is also easy to find.

Vulkan is as-of-now too new for this to be common (to have a computer that supports vulkan but not a specific vulkan function wanted by a game). It's likely to provide much more of a headache than DirectX/OpenGL though: Vulkan has no concept of feature levels and instead has a large amount of constants specifying the hardware limits explicitly, which means explicit work on the part of the developer to make sure they check these limits and stay below the reported values.

  • Incompatible sound/video system.

A typical problem when trying to run DOS games, which tend to directly access the hardware. This is usually solved by running them through an emulation layer.

  • Too much power.

This can be a thing too. A game could manually do I/O, memory, or scheduling operations, and use a variable that's too small for the number of cpu cores or available memory on the system, even though it could technically utilize all resources, once the OS allocates resources beyond the size of the index, the game will crash.

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  • "Ah, but it does run." - doesn't count, +1. ... I google the name and number of my video card and the name of the game on YouTube. That will show you the FPS you're going to get next to what everyone else is getting with their totally awesome hardware. If there's no video comparing your card to other cards, then don't get your hopes up.
    – Mazura
    Commented Feb 24, 2022 at 1:58
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You can try the following to see how well a game may run on your computer:

  • Input your hardware on PCGameBenchmark and look up the game you wish to play.
    • Most popular games can easily be found on the site.
    • The site provides a simple "yes or no" answer essentially on whether or not you can run the game.
  • Look up a YouTube video of the game you want to play and the hardware you have. This isn't always going to work, but for more popular titles and more common hardware, you should be able to find some videos to give you an idea of what the game looks and runs like.
  • Try Can you Run It? as this answer says. This is similar to the PCGameBenchmark site, only it runs an applet to get your hardware information. Additionally, the site can make some recommendations on what "things" can run the game you are interested in.
  • Adhere to the "minimum" and "recommended" hardware specifications supplied by the game developer.
    • Most games have a minimum and recommended list of hardware requirements in order to play the game. Steam is very good at listing these details, but a Google Search should also point you in the right direction.
    • A general rule of thumb is if your hardware is equal to or better than the recommended list of hardware, you should have no issues running a game (at a "playable" experience).
    • If you only meet the minimum requirements, the game will still be playable, but at a degraded experience (you'll likely need to tone down some graphical settings).

Also take note of one important distinction, as this answer points out: Running a game versus is the game playable are two different things. What you are really want to know is "is the game playable?" Most systems can run a game on most hardware, but the game play experience will vary dramatically.

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On the internet, you should find minimum system requirements for almost every game there is. If you can't find them, you can still contact the game developer. And if not any of these methods give you an answer and if the game is for free, you can simply test it on your computer.

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