Usually, I favour performance over quality and run games at lower visual levels to instead play at much higher framerates, and for Days Gone on PC, I ended up playing on medium visual settings and still managed to clock in between 80-130FPS, depending on what was happening in-game.ĭuring cinematics, the framerate would drop to a low of around 80FPS, and during open-world exploration with a few Freakers dotting my screen, it would peak around 130FPS. It's no battle station designed to run games at 300+ FPS, but it does manage to run most games at 60+ FPS on their highest graphical settings. My computer is pretty capable and uses a 9th Generation i7 CPU with an RTX 2060 and 16GB of RAM. What does all this technological jargon really mean? Well, the game looks and plays significantly better than it did on PS4.
#Days gone pc review Ps4#
With that being said, on PC, Days Gone features an unlocked framerate, faster loading times, better graphics (thanks to various factors such as increased level of detail and foliage draw distances), ultra-wide monitor support, mouse and keyboard support, support for non-DualShock controllers, and, if all of that wasn't enough, you get all the post-launch content from the PS4 game as well. Instead, I'm focussing on the adaptation and how it looks and plays from a more technical point of view. As we've already previously reviewed Days Gone, I won't be diving into the story or the sorts of activities you can get up to in this review.