Hi everybody
could my pc with rtx 2060 6gb with 16 gb of ram and I7 9th Gen run over 60 fps Halo Infinite?
Thank You
-Ciao!
Hello there! Your PC seems pretty strong so I’m pretty confident it will be able to run Halo Infinite at 60 fps, although I’m not sure if you will get max settings or not. 343 has not put out any kind of minimum or recommended PC specifications yet and they probably won’t have that until much closer to release. But you should be fine!
Assuming the OG Xbox one will run Infinite, then anything above Intel HD and 4GB RAM would be able to run it.
Your PC seems like a solid Mid to High spec and shouldn’t have any problems. Of course we will have to wait until they release the Sys reqs to say for sure.
> 2533274866022405;2:
> Hello there! Your PC seems pretty strong so I’m pretty confident it will be able to run Halo Infinite at 60 fps, although I’m not sure if you will get max settings or not. 343 has not put out any kind of minimum or recommended PC specifications yet and they probably won’t have that until much closer to release. But you should be fine!
> 2533274818084099;3:
> Assuming the OG Xbox one will run Infinite, then anything above Intel HD and 4GB RAM would be able to run it.
> Your PC seems like a solid Mid to High spec and shouldn’t have any problems. Of course we will have to wait until they release the Sys reqs to say for sure.
thank you for clearing a doubt that plagued me,
I wish you a good day and a strong greeting from Italy!
Ciao!
I mean sounds like you’d run most games over 60 FPS hopefully that includes Halo infinite as we haven’t been given the min/recommended specs yet I think
If your OG Xbox One can run Infinite, then so an your PC. Hell, the Switch can probably run it, just not in 4K.
Could anyone tell me if mine can?
I have an i5 7400, 8gb of ram and a gtx 1060 with 3gb ram. I have a series x that I’m going to play it on but was wondering if I could play it on the pc as well and if it could handle it.
> 2535471015334583;7:
> Could anyone tell me if mine can?
> I have an i5 7400, 8gb of ram and a gtx 1060 with 3gb ram. I have a series x that I’m going to play it on but was wondering if I could play it on the pc as well and if it could handle it.
Your PC can most likely handle the game well seeing as they’re developing it for both next and last gen consoles. Will you be able to max out your settings and run it in like, 4k? No not at all but to say it won’t be playable or pretty is wrong.
> 2535406417205447;1:
> Hi everybody
> could my pc with rtx 2060 6gb with 16 gb of ram and I7 9th Gen run over 60 fps Halo Infinite?
> Thank You
> -Ciao!
Your specs look to be more than enough to run the game. I have some suspicions that your performance might dip a little if you’re really pushing the game to the absolute maximum.
> 2535421108515819;6:
> If your OG Xbox One can run Infinite, then so an your PC. Hell, the Switch can probably run it, just not in 4K.
I play with screen full hd 114hrz thanks for your support 
If your pc is stronger than the Xone then itll run infinite. Like seriously, they arent making this game very performance heavy.
First, some general guidelines, then specific answers.
PC SPECS EQUAL TO XBOX ONE.
As set out for Halo 5 Forge for PC system requirements and other games, an “XBox One in PC form” is generally these:
Processor: Intel i5-6400 or AMD FX 6350 or above.
Memory: 8GB.
Graphics Card: AMD R7 260X or NVidia GTX 650 Ti Boost (other games often require GTX 660 or GTX 670) or above.
GRAPHICS CARDS BY RANKING ON UL BENCHMARKS (JANUARY 2021).
If anyone is wondering if their PC’s graphics card is equal or more powerful than an XBox One, then see the UL Benchmarks graphics cards rankings. As long as your graphics card is ranked above 83rd place, you should be fine :-).
Examples as posts above:
RTX 2060 6GB = 29th place.
GTX 1060 3GB = 60th.
XBox One equivalents most often stated as the “minimum” for new games:
GTX 670 = 83rd.
R7 260X = 92nd.
GTX 660 = 95th.
GTX 650 Ti Boost = 100th.
> 2535406417205447;1:
> could my pc with rtx 2060 6gb with 16 gb of ram and I7 9th Gen run over 60 fps Halo Infinite?
RTX 2060 6GB = 6.5+ TFLOPS, DirectX 12 Ultimate graphics code compatible (see below) for Ray Tracing etc. Should therefore run the XBox Series S Enhanced version of the game at 1080p/60fps with Ray Tracing and other new DX12 Ultimate graphics enhancements on. 120fps should also be fine, but not sure what settings.
> 2535471015334583;7:
> Could anyone tell me if mine can? I have an i5 7400, 8gb of ram and a gtx 1060 with 3gb ram. I have a series x that I’m going to play it on but was wondering if I could play it on the pc as well and if it could handle it.
GTX 1060 3GB: 3.9+ TFLOPS, supports up to DirectX 12.1 graphics code (see below). It’s the most popular card on the Steam Hardware Survey (11.36%), so 343i may well target it for good performance. Should run XB1 and XB1S version of game at 1080p/60fps comfortably, maybe even 1440p but the 3GB memory limit might limit textures to XB1 level at that resolution. Should run in 120fps mode, but not sure what resolution.
i5-7400 is a 3.0-3.5 GHz Quad Core, above the i5-6400’s 2.7-3.3 GHz (as above), and so plenty for XBox One Games.
On the other hand, the XBox Series X is 12 TFLOPS so equal to between an RTX 2080 Super and an RTX 2080Ti, and sits between the newer RTX 3070 and 3080 graphics cards. Since it sits in the top 4% or so of graphics power for Gaming PC’s currently on the Steam Hardware Survey (above), the XBox Series X will blow most of the other 96% of PC’s clean out of the water!
:-D.
DIRECTX 12 ULTIMATE - THE NEW GRAPHICS FEATURES FOR NEXT-GEN GAMES ON XBOX SERIES X/S.
All XBox and PC games can be written in Microsoft’s own cross-platform graphics code called “DirectX”. It gets updated with new graphics features every so many years, and that may need new hardware hence the generations of XBoxes like this:
XBox 360: DirectX 9.
XB1/XB1S: DirectX 9, 10, 11, 12.0.
XBox One X: as XB1, but adds 12.1 (but it’s only two commands).
XBox Series X/S: as One X for full backwards compatibility, but now adds the new DirectX Ultimate and DX 12.2 (12.2. not yet launched, but it’s the complete command set for full-on next-gen only games which will only run on DX 12.2 hardware, breaking backwards compatibility. So DX 12 Ultimate contains the “four headline features” of DX12.2 to allow new games to be made with “next-gen features” like Ray Tracing and also lets older games get updated with Ray Tracing too - 343i are even thinking of using this feature to add Ray Tracing to MCC for Series X/S!).
PC: NVidia RTX 2000 & 3000, AMD RX 6000 and Intel Xe graphics cards will all support both DX 12 Ultimate and 12.2.
So, for both of you and anyone else interested, this is a quick explanation of the new DirectX 12 Ultimate features as coming to XBox Series X/S as well as Next-gen Gaming PC’s with either NVidia RTX 2000 or 3000, AMD RX 6000 or Intel Xe series graphics cards.
To see some of the new DX12 Ultimate features in action, see IGN’s test of Gears Of War 5 “Optimised for XBox Series X” and RTX Graphics Cards showcase. He’s actually comparing the $499 Xbox Series X picture quality for this game with a $3000 Gaming PC (with an Ryzen 7 3700X processor and a top spec RTX 3090 graphics card). Now, since these DX12 Ultimate features are being added to the upgraded “Slipspace Engine 2.0” for Halo Infinite on Series X/S right now, this gives us a much better taste of what Halo Infinite will actually look like on Series X/S when it’s finished. For Series X, this is best watched streamed from YouTube at 4K/60fps on a 4K TV (search for the video title below on the YouTube App for your TV, XBox One S/One X or Series S/X). This is the bar to equal or beat with Halo Infinite, 343i! ;-).
IGN’s XBox Series X Performance Test: How Gears 5 Proves It’s A Beast .
Hope this helps someone. 
> 2535466834539387;11:
> First, some general guidelines, then specific answers.
>
> PC SPECS EQUAL TO XBOX ONE.
>
> As set out for Halo 5 Forge for PC system requirements and other games, an “XBox One in PC form” is generally these:
>
> Processor: Intel i5-6400 or AMD FX 6350 or above.
> Memory: 8GB.
> Graphics Card: AMD R7 260X or NVidia GTX 650 Ti Boost (other games often require GTX 660 or GTX 670) or above.
>
> GRAPHICS CARDS BY RANKING ON UL BENCHMARKS (JANUARY 2021).
>
> If anyone is wondering if their PC’s graphics card is equal or more powerful than an XBox One, then see the UL Benchmarks graphics cards rankings. As long as your graphics card is ranked above 83rd place, you should be fine :-).
>
> Examples as posts above:
>
> RTX 2060 6GB = 29th place.
> GTX 1060 3GB = 60th.
>
> XBox One equivalents most often stated as the “minimum” for new games:
>
> GTX 670 = 83rd.
> R7 260X = 92nd.
> GTX 660 = 95th.
> GTX 650 Ti Boost = 100th.
>
>
>
>
> > 2535406417205447;1:
> > could my pc with rtx 2060 6gb with 16 gb of ram and I7 9th Gen run over 60 fps Halo Infinite?
>
> RTX 2060 6GB = 6.5+ TFLOPS, DirectX 12 Ultimate compatible (see below) for Ray Tracing etc. Should therefore run the XBox Series S Enhanced version of the game at 1080p/60fps with Ray Tracing and other new DX12 Ultimate graphics enhancements on. 120fps should also be fine, but not sure what settings.
>
>
>
>
> > 2535471015334583;7:
> > Could anyone tell me if mine can? I have an i5 7400, 8gb of ram and a gtx 1060 with 3gb ram. I have a series x that I’m going to play it on but was wondering if I could play it on the pc as well and if it could handle it.
>
> GTX 1060 3GB: 3.9+ TFLOPS, games up to DirectX 12.1. It’s the most popular card on the Steam Hardware Survey (11.36%), so 343i may well target it for good performance. Should run XB1 and XB1S version of game at 1080p/60fps comfortably, maybe even 1440p but the 3GB memory limit might limit textures to XB1 level at that resolution. Should run in 120fps mode, but not sure what resolution.
>
> i5-7400 is a 3.0-3.5 GHz Quad Core, above the i5-6400’s 2.7-3.3 GHz (as above), and so plenty for XBox One Games.
>
> On the other hand, the XBox Series X is equal to between an RTX 2080 Super and an RTX 2080Ti, or sits between the newer RTX 3070 and 3080 graphics cards. Since it sits in the top 4% or so of graphics power for Gaming PC’s currently on the Steam Hardware Survey (above), the XBox Series X will blow most of the other 96% of PC’s clean out of the water!
:-D.
>
> DIRECTX 12 ULTIMATE - THE NEW GRAPHICS FEATURES FOR NEXT-GEN GAMES ON XBOX SERIES X/S.
>
> For both of you and anyone else interested, this is a quick explanation of DirectX 12 Ultimate as coming to XBox Series X/S as well as Next-gen Gaming PC’s with either NVidia RTX 2000 or 3000, AMD RX 6000 or Intel Xe series graphics cards.
>
> To see some of the new DX12 Ultimate features in action, see IGN’s test of Gears Of War 5 “Optimised for XBox Series X” and RTX Graphics Cards showcase. He’s actually comparing the $499 Xbox Series X picture quality for this game with a $3000 Gaming PC (with an Ryzen 7 3700X processor and a top spec RTX 3090 graphics card). Now, since these DX12 Ultimate features are being added to the upgraded “Slipspace Engine 2.0” for Halo Infinite on Series X/S right now, this gives us a much better taste of what Halo Infinite will actually look like on Series X/S when it’s finished. For Series X, this is best watched streamed from YouTube at 4K/60fps on a 4K TV (search for the video title below on your TV or XBox One S/One X or Series S/X). This is the bar to equal or beat with Halo Infinite, 343i! ;-).
>
> IGN’s XBox Series X Performance Test: How Gears 5 Proves It’s A Beast .
>
> Hope this helps someone. 
Thank you so much for your very professional and detailed response!
The only thing that could set you back is the 16gb of Ram. It seems games are getting ramped up more and more so 16 might not cut it. It might be able too but it could hog all the Ram.
I would count on it. You have higher than the recommended specs of most AAA games, so yes.
Even with a graphic update since the 2020 demo, the game still has to run on the fat Xbox One, and your PC has specs that can be compared to a Series X (which is close to a 2070 super), so pretty much, yes, at least in 4k60 with settings close to the Series X without raytracing