![]() DOOM PNY NVIDIA GTX 960 OC 4gb Benchmark ResultsĭOOM Low vs Ultra Screenshot Graphics ComparisonĭOOM feels like the modernising we’ve all secretly (or not so secretly) yearned for since the time of Doom and Doom II. Irritatingly, there was no way to turn off motion blur in DOOM, as you’re only able to reduce motion blur via the graphics settings. So those of us on older hardware should still be in for a treat. Glowing lights on the pistol, for example, are the most obvious difference between Low and Ultra graphics, but even on Low setting DOOM looks fantastic. Only the lighting in DOOM really has a drastic impact, with graphical texture quality remaining pretty consistent across all DOOM graphics settings. These DOOM benchmarks were performed on our PNY NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960 OC XLR8 4gb, Intel i7-5820K CPU and 16GB of RAM PC to see how well the game runs from 720p up to 1080p, and taking in the full range of Low to Ultra graphics settings. Bringing a lot more to the table in terms of graphics options than seen in the DOOM beta, the full release looks gorgeous and brings that classic speed that was sorely missing from DOOM 3. ![]() ![]() DOOM is finally here, promising all the gore and demon violence you can shake a pentagram at. ![]()
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