Deep Silver has lifted the preview embargo for Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2, and some first benchmarks have surfaced for it. According to them, the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 can run it at Native 4K/Ultra Settings with 60FPS.
GameGPU got access to the preview build and shared the following benchmarks. As we can see, the game features a preset above Ultra, called Experimental. This setting is, most likely, for future GPUs. Sadly, the in-game settings do not clarify whether these higher settings use any Ray Tracing effects. I guess we’ll find out ourselves when the game comes out.
At Native 4K/Ultra, the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 runs GameGPU’s benchmark scene with a minimum of 58FPS and an average of 70FPS. As for the Experimental Settings, the NVIDIA RTX 4090 appears to not be powerful enough to handle them. At least at Native 4K. With these settings, the game runs with an average of 50FPS and a minimum of 38FPS.
Since this is a preview build, it may not reflect the performance of the final build. Also, different areas of the game might give different results. It also seems like KCD2 doesn’t have a built-in benchmark tool.
Deep Silver will release Kingdom Come: Deliverance 2 on February 4th. The game is powered by CRYENGINE, and you can find its official PC system requirements here. Plus, Warhorse has confirmed that the game will not be using the Denuvo anti-tamper.
Finally, I’ve included below some new screenshots that Deep Silver released.
Stay tuned for more!
John is the founder and Editor in Chief at DSOGaming. He is a PC gaming fan and highly supports the modding and indie communities. Before creating DSOGaming, John worked on numerous gaming websites. While he is a die-hard PC gamer, his gaming roots can be found on consoles. John loved – and still does – the 16-bit consoles, and considers SNES to be one of the best consoles. Still, the PC platform won him over consoles. That was mainly due to 3DFX and its iconic dedicated 3D accelerator graphics card, Voodoo 2. John has also written a higher degree thesis on the “The Evolution of PC graphics cards.”
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