Minimum specs
Capcom’s PRAGMATA is almost here, and if you want to send Hugh and his android companion Diana into the game’s frozen lunar research station without your PC melting into a very expensive lesson, the studio has now published the official requirements.
At the lowest preset, Capcom says the game should reach about 45 frames per second at 1080p when set to the Performance preset. That baseline is not exactly ancient history, either. You will need:
- CPU: Intel Core i5-8500 or AMD Ryzen 5 3500
- Memory: 16GB RAM
- GPU: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1660 or AMD Radeon RX 5500 XT
An SSD is recommended as well, which is a polite way of saying faster storage will help, even if Capcom is not making it a hard requirement. If your system is in this range, PRAGMATA should be playable, though you should not expect every visual setting to be maxed out just because optimism is free.
Recommended specs
For players aiming for a smoother experience, the recommended setup is the better target. Capcom says systems meeting these specs can hit around 60 frames per second at 1080p on the Balanced preset, although heavier scenes may still cause dips. Apparently even the moon has frame drops.
The recommended hardware is:
- CPU: Intel Core i7-8700 or AMD Ryzen 5 5500
- Memory: 16GB RAM
- GPU: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2060 Super or AMD Radeon RX 6600
This is the sweet spot for most players who want the game to look good without turning their PC into a shrine to unnecessary hardware upgrades. You do not need anything absurdly high-end, like a GeForce RTX 5090, unless collecting expensive components is part of your personality.
Ray tracing support
Yes, PRAGMATA will support ray tracing on PC. No, it does not come cheap.
Capcom notes on the game’s Steam page that ray tracing requires at least an AMD Radeon RX 6700 XT 12GB or NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 12GB. That puts the feature well above the base recommended spec, so if you want those extra lighting effects, your GPU will need to do more than merely show up.
Based on the trailers, the game already looks strong without ray tracing enabled, but if you have the hardware to spare, Capcom is clearly happy to let you lean into the prettier version of lunar science fiction.
One more comparison worth noting
Capcom’s latest sci-fi action-adventure is also being framed as the closest AAA title to compete with Starfield, the Xbox game that is finally heading to PlayStation in April 2026. A curious comparison, perhaps, but the marketing department has a job to do.