Yakuza: Remastered Collection PC system requirements have been revealed
We heard last month that the Yakuza Remastered Collection consisting of graphically-improved versions of Yakuza 3, 4, and 5 would be coming to PC for the first time on January 28, and now we know what you’ll need to be able to run the game. Unsurprisingly, the collection doesn’t ask for much power, though we expect that when Yakuza 6 releases in March it’ll have significantly higher system requirements.
According to the Microsoft Store (via The Tojo Dojo), you’ll only need the equivalent of AMD’s eight-year-old FX-8350 CPU, Nvidia’s GTX 570 graphics card or better, and just 4GB of RAM for the best experience. That’s a GPU over ten years old, by the way, so you definitely don’t need the best graphics card available to play. The game will also be available as part of the Game Pass subscription service, and is expected to be released on Steam in addition to the Microsoft Store.
Nvidia’s RTX 3000 laptop benchmarks are up to 48% better than the previous gen
New gaming laptops with mobile versions of Nvidia’s best graphics cards are starting to come to market now, and we’ve had the first glimpse of how they might compare to their desktop counterparts, thanks to Twitter leakers 9550pro and Harukaze5719.
Starting off with an unknown gaming laptop packing Nvidia’s mobile RTX 3060 card combined with an AMD Ryzen 7 5800H, there’s a graphics score given of 8,843 in 3DMark Time Spy. That’s pretty much on par with the average score of the previous generation desktop equivalent, the RTX 2060, with a score of 8,828. Comparing it to the mobile previous gen equivalent, there’s an impressive graphics score increase of 48%.
Despite the fact that the add-on is already available for purchase (for a rather affordable $14.70) on Orbx’s store, the developer is considering this a sort of “open beta” release, with the full launch coming in 1-2 weeks.
For that reason, this is going to be an unscored preview, with a full scored review coming when the airport is officially considered released.
Like all airport available on Orbx’s store, WSSS can be installed painlessly via the Orbx Central clent, and you’re ready to go almost immediately.
If you’d like to see what the airport looks like in detail in Microsoft Flight Simulator, you can check out the in-depth flyover video below, showing the airport from every angle, every weather condition (even if you’re unlikely to see snow in Singapore), and at night.