The internet is furious about Monster Hunter Wilds’ PC requirements

    By Jacob Roach
Published September 25, 2024

Following up on the Sony State of Play, Capcom released the PC requirements for the upcoming Monster Hunter Wilds, and the response hasn’t been great. For the most part, the requirements aren’t insane. You’ll need a midrange CPU from the last few generations, 16GB of RAM, and 140GB of space of SSD — yes, a 140GB game isn’t that insane in 2024. The issue concerns what kind of graphics card you’ll need.

In the recommended specs, Capcom lists the RTX 2070 Super, RTX 4060, or RX 6700 XT as possible options. However, this is to get you 60 frames per second (fps) at 1080p with the Medium graphics preset. Worse, and the center of most of the controversy, is that these requirements assume you have frame generation enabled.

The internet unsurprisingly isn’t happy. On the r/Nvidia subreddit, user u/jungianRaven wrote: “Using framegen to reach 60fps is insane. I’m surprised they actually list it as a performance target.” On the r/MonsterHunter subreddit, user u/pinkeyes34 shared a similar sentiment: “Frame gen just to reach 60fps. That’s pretty much my worst fear of the game realized.”

You can see these comments echoed in just about every forum post where the Monster Hunter Wilds system requirements have shown up, and it’s no surprise. Frame-generation technology, such as what’s available with DLSS 3 and FSR 3, increases latency. The game may look like it’s running at 60 fps, but since half of those frames are generated, you get the responsiveness of a game that’s running at 30 fps.

This isn’t a big issue at higher frame rates, which is why frame-generation tools like Lossless Scaling recommend a base frame rate of at least 60 fps before turning on frame generation. At lower base frame rates, such as 30 fps, there’s a strange disconnect between the smoothness you see on screen and the responsive you feel with your controller.

Frame generation also doesn’t work well at lower base frame rates. The tech works by rendering two frames, comparing them, and then guessing what a frame in between would look like — a technique known as frame interpolation. With a low base frame rate, there’s a large difference between two rendered frames, meaning the frame generation algorithm has to do a lot more guessing. That leads to nasty visual artifacts that otherwise wouldn’t show up.

All of this is ignoring that Monster Hunter Wilds recommends frame generation to reach 60 fps on the Medium preset of the game at 1080p, which is a fairly low performance target for graphics cards as powerful as the RTX 4060 and RX 6700 XT. It’s possible Capcom is playing it safe with its system requirements after the disastrous PC release of Dragon’s Dogma 2, but we won’t know for sure until Monster Hunter Wilds releases on February 28, 2025.

Related Posts

Your first Windows on ARM gaming laptop may be a Lenovo Legion

The clue comes from how Lenovo's naming appears to tag the platform inside each system. Qualcomm is marked with a Q, while NVIDIA shows up under two labels, N1 and N1X. A dataminer, Huang514613, surfaced a cluster of Lenovo models where those tags appear across multiple families, not just one device.

New study shows AI isn’t ready for office work

A reality check for the "replacement" theory

Google Research suggests AI models like DeepSeek exhibit collective intelligence patterns

The paper, published on arXiv with the evocative title Reasoning Models Generate Societies of Thought, posits that these models don't merely compute; they implicitly simulate a "multi-agent" interaction. Imagine a boardroom full of experts tossing ideas around, challenging each other's assumptions, and looking at a problem from different angles before finally agreeing on the best answer. That is essentially what is happening inside the code. The researchers found that these models exhibit "perspective diversity," meaning they generate conflicting viewpoints and work to resolve them internally, much like a team of colleagues debating a strategy to find the best path forward.