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This PC can be upgraded with an external graphic card, with 12GB memory and i7 2.5ghz processor, it packs a punch!
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I do not know what the Fallout 4 system requirements are but I can tell you this. I went from playing Guild Wars 2 on a 2011 HP with a 2011 i3 and Intel HD 3000 graphics to this machine. Wow, what a difference. I let the game auto select my settings and the only thing it nixed was anti aliasing. Most of the settings were moved to low or medium (with a few on high). That gave me a frame rate of 60 fps. I think bumped up a number of settings really smoothing out the appearance of the game and my frame rate now hovers between 40 and 50 (which is not noticeable while playing). Camera panning is smooth as are the effects animations. GW2 is an MMORPG with as many as 30 players at once attacking a boss. Even during these "zerg" events, play is smooth and without lag. I also noticed that this laptop seems to stay considerably cooler while playing than my older HP; testament to how little the CPU/GPU are working even during active play. The only thing I might try (if its possible - I have not checked) is adding more RAM. And the RAM is the ONLY downside as it is DDR3 and not DDR4 (which the Skylake architecture does actually support). I hope that gives you some insight.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Yes but try not to put the settings up too high since this is not marketed as a gaming laptop. I played GTA 5 with medium settings and it worked flawlessly.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Ive been playing Elder Scrolls on medium settings and it works well. I would think you could play Fall Out 4 as well.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.It's better to play this and any other games on XBOX one; it's equipped to handle it. Did you purchase or are purchasing ASUS laptop just for gaming?
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