Gaming
Horizon Forbidden West: PC requirements revealed
More devices to play the game on
Thinking of playing Horizon Forbidden West but never had a console to try it? Luckily, Guerrilla Games’s action adventure title is now on PC via Steam and Epic Games, as announced last year. To help you prepare, the developer has also revealed the recommended PC specifications for those who are interested to play.
Guerrilla has released graphics presets from “Very Low” to “High.” For starters, players will need at least a Windows 10 OS, 16GB RAM, and 150GB of SSD space.
Now, for the other requirements crucial to performance:
Very low (minimum)
- Processor: Intel Core i3-8100 or AMD Ryzen 3 1300X
- Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 4GB or AMD Radeon RX 5500XT 4GB
- Average performance: 720p @ 30 fps
Recommended
- Processor: Intel Core i5-8600 or AMD Ryzen 5 3600
- Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 or AMD Radeon RX 5700
- Average performance: 1080p @ 30 fps
High
- Processor: Intel Core i7-9700 or AMD Ryzen 7 3700X
- Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3070 or AMD Radeon RX 6800
- Average performance: 1440p @ 60fps or 4K @ 30fps
Ultra High
- Processor: Intel Core i7-11700 or AMD Ryzen 7 5700X
- Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4080 or AMD Radeon RX 7900XT
- Average performance: 4K @ 60 fps
Players may tinker with the settings and visuals themselves to suit their liking. Through the launcher and in the game menus, they may change the individual quality settings for textures, level of detail, shadows, water, terrain and more. They may simply adjust the sliders as well for visual settings like field of view, motion blur, and film grain. Moreover, they may find toggles to adjust full screen effects like radial blur, lens flares, bloom, and vignette.
Bonus content
Horizon Forbidden West (Complete Edition) can be played on PCs and portable gaming devices.
They’ll get both the base game and the Burning Shores expansion. The Complete Edition is likewise inclusive of the following:
- Carja Behemoth Elite outfit and short bow
- Nora Thunder Elite outfit and sling
- Photo Mode Unlocks
- Apex Clawstrider Strike Piece
- In-game Resources Pack
- Digital Soundtrack
- Digital Artbook
- The Sunhawk Digital Comic Book
Furthermore, pre-purchases also receive the Blacktide Dye Outfit and Blacktide Sharpshort Bow.
Gaming
Valve is embroiled in a lawsuit with New York over loot boxes
Valve has been embroiled in an odd war as of late. A few weeks ago, the New York Attorney General filed a lawsuit against the gaming company for allegedly encouraging children to gamble through loot boxes primarily found in Counter-Strike 2. Today, Valve is fighting back by declaring how little its loot boxes have to do with gambling.
For years, governments have had a problem with loot boxes. To them, the mechanic makes it too easy for gamers to fall into a gambling addiction. In essence, loot boxes are earnable packs that contain a single or a number of random items that the player can use for their game. Most of the time, these items are purely cosmetic and don’t give a gameplay advantage.
Like Blizzard before it, Valve is also defending its loot boxes as non-essential to how players engage with their games. “There is no disadvantage to a player not spending money,” their statement reads.
Additionally, Valve says that their loot boxes are no different from Pokémon cards and Labubu blind boxes. As such, the company is also defending their users’ right to transfer obtained items to other users, as with two players trading cards or Pop Mart figurines.
Now, these items have monetary value in the market. In the same way, a rare Counter-Strike 2 skin can fetch thousands of dollars. However, Valve says that they are already proactive in shutting down accounts made only to gamble and avoiding pro-gambling businesses.
Valve is capping off its statement by saying that the NYAG is forcing the company to collect more information from its users, especially those using VPNs to prevent being located in New York. The company says that it will continue to protect user data, despite the demand.
What is an Xbox? For the past year and a half, Microsoft will tell you that anything can be an Xbox. Now, with Project Helix on the horizon, Xbox wants to bring the idea of playing anywhere to the next level. Microsoft will start rolling out its new Xbox Mode to PCs in April.
Since the very first device out in the market, handheld consoles have changed how people play games. Naturally, a lot can already be said about the portability and the convenience of its hardware. But the software needs a special shoutout, too.
Though they are essentially PCs at heart, these consoles are built explicitly for gaming. Fiddling around with Windows isn’t ideal. Instead, they have special software that can collate all of a user’s games into one hub.
The new Xbox Mode, adapted from the ROG Xbox Ally X’s Xbox Full Screen Experience, will do just that but on an actual PC. As announced via an official blog post, Xbox will release the new mode to Windows 11 devices in April, starting with select markets. Like the software used in handheld consoles, Xbox Mode should include all the available games from the Game Pass, Steam, and the Epic Games Store.
Right now, the feature will likely go up against Steam’s Big Picture Mode, which does the same thing but only for Steam titles. However, it should also transition neatly to Project Helix. Xbox is now ramping up the development of its next-generation console codenamed Project Helix. The upcoming machine will be a high-end PC and a gaming console rolled into one, making it perfect for Xbox Mode.
SEE ALSO: Project Helix is Xbox’s next console, and it plays PC games
Gaming
Resident Evil Requiem will get a story expansion
There’s no word yet on when the story expansion will drop.
Resident Evil Requiem, Pokémon Pokopia, and Slay the Spire 2. Between these three, gamers today are eating well and good. Or rather, they’re not, because of how addicting of a time sink these titles are. The latter two especially are built to be played over and over for weeks and months. Now, Resident Evil Requiem is working on something, so you also won’t forget about it in a few months’ time.
Via an official post on Resident Evil’s social media platforms, Capcom has confirmed that a story expansion is coming to the horror game. Currently, the base game doesn’t take long to beat, especially when compared to other RPGs today. The expansion should add more content to explore the story’s world.
Right now, Capcom can’t share a timeline for the update’s launch. However, in the meantime, the developers are cooking up a few minor updates to keep the game alive. For one, the game will receive performance updates to improve the smoothness of gameplay and fix bugs. It will also get a photo mode for all you Leon-holics out there.
Finally, in May, the base game will get a “minigame” added to the main game. There’s no word as to what this minigame is, so we’ll have to wait for when it drops.
Resident Evil Requiem is out now on all major platforms. The game features the survival horror style of the modern Resident Evil games, while serving up the classic action gameplay with the return of Leon S. Kennedy as a co-protagonist with Grace Ashcroft.
SEE ALSO: Resident Evil Requiem is out now
-
Reviews2 weeks agoTECNO CAMON 50 Ultra review: End of an era?
-
MWC 20262 weeks agoInfinix NOTE 60 Ultra makes a motorsport-inspired debut
-
MWC 20262 weeks agoTECNO launches the all-new CAMON 50 series
-
MWC 20262 weeks agoTECNO showcases cool concepts at MWC 2026
-
MWC 20262 weeks agoTECNO unleashes Tonino Lamborghini collection
-
Computers2 weeks agoAMD announces Ryzen AI 400, AI 400 PRO series at MWC 2026
-
MWC 20262 weeks agoHONOR unveils Robot Phone concept at MWC 2026
-
MWC 20262 weeks agoTECNO debuts latest devices, HiOS 16, upgraded Ella at MWC 2026
