There is now just a few more weeks until the release of the highly awaited action role-playing video game, "Mass Effect: Andromeda." However, the fourth main installment in the "Mass Effect" video game series will be made available a week early for some PC players via Electronic Arts' Origin Access service. To give players an idea of what will be needed to run the game, Nvidia has now released the official PC system requirement for the game along with its different graphic option.

According to Polygon, "Mass Effect: Andromeda" will be coming with a hefty number of graphic options that will change the way the game looks in significant ways. Having the right setup will allow players to fully utilize all the options, while less powerful rigs can still run the game by disabling or lowering down select graphic enhancement features.

There is a total of 16 graphic options that have either variable detail levels or an off and on toggle. The options include Ambient Occlusion, Chromatic Aberration, Film Grain, Mesh Quality, Resolution Scaling, Shadow Quality, Texture Filtering Quality, Vegetation Quality, Anti-Aliasing, Effects Quality, Lighting Quality, Post-process Effect Quality, Shader Quality, Terrain Quality, and Texture Quality.

As per Nvidia's suggestion, the players will be able to max out all of the settings if they use either the Nvidia GeForce 1070, the GeForce 1080, or the recently unveiled GeForce 1080 Ti. However, those who don't really have the option to purchase the new GPUs will still be able to run the game at full HD resolutions using a GeForce GTX 1060 or a GeForce GTX 970. The bare minimum, however, will be a GPU with 2GB of GDDR5 memory such as the GeForce GTX 660.

"Mass Effect: Andromeda" is scheduled to be released for the PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and Windows PC on March 21. While the game is considered to be the sequel to "Mass Effect 3," it will no longer be featuring any of the characters and settings in the previous games.

© Copyright 2024 Mobile & Apps, All rights reserved. Do not reproduce without permission.