Black Myth: Wukong has swiftly risen up to become the most wishlisted game on Steam. Though it doesn't come out for one whole week. Ugh. Thankfully we can spend our time wisely in preparation for the big day—by repeatedly running the game's new benchmarking tool to nail our settings just right.
The new benchmarking tool is listed over on Steam for download. It's free, of course, and doesn't require you to have pre-ordered the game. It's actually popular in its own right, as since its release mere hours ago it's become the 18th most played 'game' on Steam, with over 60,000 players at its peak.
This is the sort of hunger for benchmarking that we relish here on the PC Gamer hardware team. Hey, if you love benchmarking so much, why don't you come work here. That's not a joke.
I've been playing around with the benchmarking tool this morning, and in most respects it appears a pretty darn good one. You can tweak most of the game settings within the tool itself, which means you can genuinely find the best settings for the game for your specific system ahead of its release.
I've run my gaming PC through the test. It's made up of an RTX 4080, Ryzen 9 5900X, 32 GB DDR5 RAM, too many SSDs to count, and a chunky air cooler (air ftw). There's also a 4K gaming monitor attached for good measure. According to the benchmark, I'm able to crank out 70 fps at 4K (61 fps min) with every graphics setting maxed out—including ray tracing and cinematic quality visuals. I also have DLSS enabled in Balanced mode with Frame Generation switched on, which helps out a ton.
The inclusion of DLSS, XeSS, and FSR is sure to help most gamers out. We've run the benchmark with high settings, no ray tracing, and XeSS enabled at 3440 x 1400 on Intel's Arc A770 and managed to reach 34 fps. Okay, that's not great by comparison to Nvidia's top cards but it's at least relatively playable thanks to upscaling.
It's worth running the benchmark a few times to get a stable score, however. I ran it once and somethin
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