Why Yes, It Can Probably Play Battlefield 6

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Even That Old GTX 1080 Ti Should Do In A Pinch

Battlefield 6 is coming, just in time for the Thanksgiving Day long weekend (the Canadian version which is far superior), on 10/10 and from the specifications listed at TweakTown it is playable on anything short of a potato.  On the other hand, Battlefield 6 requires a few annoying changes to the settings on your PC to perform at it’s best and that may prove a hurdle for some gamers.  The base requirements are an RTX 2060/RX 5600 XT/Arc A380 with either a Core i5-8400 or Ryzen 5 2600.

If you want to really have fun, for 4K @ 60 FPS or 1440p @ 144 FPS you need to spend a bit more money.  For those resolutions an RTX 4080 or RX 7900 XTX are recommended; sorry about that Intel Arc.  The GPU should be paired with at least a Core i9-12900k or Ryzen 7 7800X3D on a system that has at least 16GB of RAM.  Not as steep as it could be but still somewhat high end.

That’s just the hardware side though, you also need to make sure your system is configured the way EA wants it to be.  You need to enable Safe Boot and have a TPM 2.0 chip on your motherboard, there are no if, ands nor buts about it.  If you don’t want to deal with that, you’ll have to find something else to play.  

There is also mention that your system needs to be Hypervisor-Protected Code Integrity capable, though it is unclear if that is required or just a recommendation.  You can check, or even enable this by searching for Core Isolation and toggling Memory integrity to On, if it is not already.  These are thanks to the EA Javelin anti-cheat software which is supposed to protect your Battlefield 6 experience from cheaters.  That protection will probably last about as long as it takes you to enable these two security settings; by then it will likely have been overcome.

See you on the battlefield.



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