

Needless to say, though, you're probably going to need something a bit beefier than The Witcher 3's recommended Nvidia GeForce GTX 770 or AMD Radeon R9 290 graphics cards to stand a chance of running it. Obviously, that's a heck of a beastly PC, but Alicja was quick to point out that Cyberpunk 2077's E3 demo wasn't an optimised version of the game, so it's unlikely we'll need anything remotely this powerful to play it in its finished state, whenever that might be. Motherboard: Asus ROG Strix Z370-I Gaming.RAM: 32GB G.Skill Ripjaws V running at 3000MHz.

CPU: Intel Core i7-8700K running at 3.7GHz.But thanks to CD Projekt Red's official Cyberpunk 2077 Discord channel and this handy list of official CD Projekt Red responses to the game, we now know otherwise.Īccording to community manager Alicja Kozera, CD Projekt Red used the following PC spec to run their E3 2018 Cyberpunk 2077 demo: Indeed, some jaws were so badly damaged by Cyberpunk 2077's behind-closed-doors demo that they claimed it couldn't possibly be running on any kind of current gen hardware - that this futuristic world of neo-noir, drug-addled cybernetic mercenaries had, in fact, been beamed in from the year 2077 itself. I didn't even go to E3 last week, but the sound of the games media's collective jaws dropping over CD Projekt Red's astounding Cyberpunk 2077 demo travelled so far across the globe that it was almost like I was in the room there with them - especially after reading Brendan's exhaustive preview on the subject, his interview with lead cinematic animator Maciej Pietras and Dave's in-depth Cyberpunk 2077 guide on everything we know so far.
