Can I run BF3 on the highest settings?

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I apologize if this is the wrong section, I am new to PCs, I was wondering if I had good enough specs to run BF3 on the highest settings. My specs are: 200gb HDD, 4gb RAM, AMD Athlon™ II X2 250, ATI Radeon HD4200. I heard that anything higher than a 570 can run BF3 on medium to high settings (playable settings). Just would like some advice from the experts such as yourselves as I don't want to buy BF3 and then find I have to play it in low quality.

Also it would be helpful if you could tell me how many fps I will get.

Thanks

EDIT:
Lol! Just no.
Thanks for the response.
I do not want to run it on maximal settings. I just want to run it at a setting that won't be too terrible on the eyes.

Do you recommend any upgrade I should make to the system? It is a Dell PC if that is useful
 
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I apologize if this is the wrong section, I am new to PCs, I was wondering if I had good enough specs to run BF3 on the highest settings. My specs are: 200gb HDD, 4gb RAM, AMD Athlon™ II X2 250, ATI Radeon HD4200. I heard that anything higher than a 570 can run BF3 on high settings, 4200 is a lot higher than 570 so I think I should be fine. Just would like some advice from the experts such as yourselves as I don't want to buy BF3 and then find I have to play it in low quality.

Also it would be helpful if you could tell me how many fpm I will get.

Thanks

Lol! Just no.
 
i really didnt think ATIs naming system would fool anyone, but either you are trolling everyone, or you genuinely believe that because the ATI cards names are in the 1000's that they are all better than the Nvidia cards

the 4200 is truly a terrible card, probably equivalent to the Nvidia GT420 but im not sure because i honestly didnt realise ATI sold a graphics card that low end.

if you want to run BF3 at med-high settings then your best bet is to sell the dell as a whole and buy a new PC for ~£750-1000.

ps, your asking how many fpm you will get. while i suspect you mean fps (frames per second) you have actually asked for frames per minute. i suspect you will get ~30frames per minute with that graphics card perhaps 90 if your lucky. far lower than the recommended 3600FPM (60FPS)
 
i really didnt think ATIs naming system would fool anyone, but either you are trolling everyone, or you genuinely believe that because the ATI cards names are in the 1000's that they are all better than the Nvidia cards

the 4200 is truly a terrible card, probably equivalent to the Nvidia GT420 but im not sure because i honestly didnt realise ATI sold a graphics card that low end.

if you want to run BF3 at med-high settings then your best bet is to sell the dell as a whole and buy a new PC for ~£750-1000.

ps, your asking how many fpm you will get. while i suspect you mean fps (frames per second) you have actually asked for frames per minute. i suspect you will get ~30frames per minute with that graphics card perhaps 90 if your lucky. far lower than the recommended 3600FPM (60FPS)

Ok, edited to fix it. I meant FPS AKA frames per second. I thought higher the number the higher the power. Is the GBs how good it is? How do I judge a graphical cards power? What PC shall I buy instead for your suggested price? I have heard another series is good but they are quite expensive for me. I am also considering building own PC but don't know where I can get tutorials.
 
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Ok, edited to fix it. I meant FPS AKA frames per second. I thought higher the number the higher the power. Is the GBs how good it is? How do I judge a graphical cards power? What PC shall I buy instead for your suggested price? I have heard the *DONT MENTION COMPETITORS* series is good but they are quite expensive for me. I am also considering building own PC but don't know where I can get tutorials.
Get one from overclockers, they pwn.
 
TBH BF3 runs fine on a HD5850 1GB, though not on Ultra. In reality, it looks great on medium/high

You will need;

A competent quad core CPU - Phenom II x4/6 @ 3GHz + or Intel Q6xxx/9xxx+/i5 750 etc
At least 4GB RAM (though 8GB makes a huge difference
A capable video card, budget and screen size dependent.

What screen size do you use?
 
TBH BF3 runs fine on a HD5850 1GB, though not on Ultra. In reality, it looks great on medium/high

You will need;

A competent quad core CPU - Phenom II x4/6 @ 3GHz + or Intel Q6xxx/9xxx+/i5 750 etc
At least 4GB RAM (though 8GB makes a huge difference
A capable video card, budget and screen size dependent.

What screen size do you use?

agreed, 5850 - high settings - it doesnt like Ultra. My quad core Q6700 Kentsfield CPU is fine, runs cooler with B3 than Bad Company 2.
 
Hi there,

If you are mainly interested in playing BF3 then your CPU of an Athlon II X2 is likely to be enough -see here (though many other games will not be so forgiving of this low-end CPU).

However, your graphics card is just a bottom-end integrated card that would struggle to play BF2, never mind BF3.

To play BF3 on medium settings you really need to spend ~£100 or more (depending on your resolution) on a new graphics card and ~£50 on a new PSU - since the included one in your system will almost certainly not work with a new 129W graphics card. To install a new PSU your current one needs to be a standard ATX size, you mention it is a Dell PC - do you have the model number?

As for what components to go for I would suggest the HD 6850 graphics card and this PSU.

Therefore, it is possible to get your current PC playing BF3 pretty well by investing ~£150 (so long as the PSU is standard size).
 
^^ Single player is a cake walk. 64 man vehicle servers sort the wheat from the chaff CPU wise

Aye, for sure. But with a Athlon II X2 he will be able to get into the game and run it without issue in most cases.

If he has an extra £60 (after upgrading the PSU and graphics) then a second hand Phenom II X4 CPU would be very welcome upgrade for playing large BF3 multiplayer games (and other modern games in general) - so long as the dell motherboard supports it.
 
Fair enough. OP are you intending to buy all new or second hand?

Assuming you use the Athlon XII from your Dell and reusing your hard drive I'd get the following

YOUR BASKET
1 x Sapphire ATI Radeon HD 6950 "Dual Fan Edition" 2048MB GDDR5 PCI-Express Graphics Card with FREE Deus Ex PC Game £219.95
1 x Asus M5A97 AMD 970 (Socket AM3+) DDR3 Motherboard £79.99
1 x Corsair Builder Series CX 500W V2 '80 Plus' Power Supply (CMPSU-500CXUKV2) £48.98
1 x Kingston HyperX Genesis Grey 8GB (2x4GB) DDR3 PC3-12800C9 1600MHz Dual Channel Kit (KHX1600C9D3X2K2/8GX) £39.98
Total : £400.91 (includes shipping : £10.00).



Now, this has an ATX board which may or may not fit in your Dell (some Dells have a custom IO arrangement/unconventional motherboard stand off layout and a lot are MATX only), you might have to add a case. Also not included is an OS. According to Microsoft you need a new Windows license as the one on your Dell is an OEM and therefore tied to your motherboard... according to Microsoft. Put the PSU from the Dell in your spares cupboard, it won't be good enough full stop. Do not scrimp on the PSU. I've specced 8GB of DDR3 RAM, you didn't mention if your 4GB was DDR2 or 3, could be either but I'd hazard a guess at DDR2 judging by the onboard graphics chipset. The GPU is debatable, I use a 6950 myself (unlocked to 6970) and it's absolutely fine for 1080p. The board is a little over specification for your current requirements but it will take up to a 140w chip of the Phenom II/FX 8xxx flavour and perhaps their successors. A decent CPU cooler would be a nice addition but you could get away with the stock for a while unless you're overclocking
 
Awww op edited the bit about a HD4200 being better than a 570 out of his post. I thought it was cute, somewhat endearing.

:(
 
long post warning


Ok, edited to fix it. I meant FPS AKA frames per second.
i figured that and tried to be funny in my reply but failed

I thought higher the number the higher the power. How do I judge a graphical cards power?
in general, you are right in saying that the higher a graphics card number is, the better it is. however, there is more to it than that because different brands have different naming systems

there are two main brands of graphics card: Nvidia and ATI.
for a few generations or 'series' of graphics card Nvidia have been using three digits. the first being the generation number, and the last two being how high up the graphics card food chain it is.
for example, the Nvidia GTX 470 is in the 400 series, is faster than the GTX460 but slower than the GTX480
ATI use a similar system, but with 4 digits instead of three. so the ATI 6950 is in the 6000 series, is faster than the 6870 and slower than the 6970
the 500 series from Nvidia is the same age as the 6000 series from ATI.

from there you can see two problems:
1. how do you know how much better the cards from the newest series are to their older equivalents
2. how do you know how much better the cards from one brand are than the other

the only solution to this problem is to go to websites which have tried them on lots of games to see which gets the best fps for the money. my favourite site is this one:
http://www.anandtech.com/bench/GPU11/188

Is the GBs how good it is?
the amount of VRAM (in MB or GB) is the amount of RAM the graphics card has all to itself. if your graphics card has enough you generally dont need to worry about it.
these days games are using more and more VRAM, so if your going for a mid range graphics card for about £125 then 1GB is the recommended amount. if you are going for a higher end graphics card then 1.5GB or more is recommended

if you have a very high resolution screen, or are using more than one screen for your game, then 2GB is recommended

What PC shall I buy instead for your suggested price? I have heard another series is good but they are quite expensive for me.
since i dont know an awful lot of the details of your computer i cant be specific, but if you want to play BF3 on medium settings i would suggest:
- new processor: probably a Phenom II X4 955BE
- new graphics card: ~£125 should be enough for this
- new power supply: fast graphics cards need a lot of power. your old one power supply is almost certainly not powerful enough for the bigger graphics cards

however, before i recommend you anything, could you download a program called CPUz. this free program tells you information about the computer. what i am after is the motherboard make and model (this should be in the mainboard tab. the manufacturer and model is what im after)
this will let me know what processors your motherboard can support if CPUz can identify the motherboard

also, if you are happy to, could you take the side panel off of the case (when the PC is off of course) and tell me roughly how much space there is between where the expansion slots are and the first thing a graphics card would hit at the other end.
this image helps show what i mean:
http://www.antec.com/Believe_it/images/product_del/Big/704923/03.jpg
(no idea what case it is, i just found the picture on the internet)

some graphics cards are very long (up to 30cm) so i dont want to recommend something that wouldnt fit.
sometimes the hard drive 'cages' can be removed to make extra space for graphics cards

also, while i remember, can you also tell me how many slots there are where the left hand side of that arrow is, that will tell me how big a motherboard can fit in your current case if your motherboard is not good enough

I am also considering building own PC but don't know where I can get tutorials.

here are some great tutorials for building a PC:
(part one is choosing the components, so dont worry about that, thats what we're here to help with)

i hope this helps. as soon as you tell me your motherboard i can start recommending things
 
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