PCGameBenchmarks

Can GeForce GTX 1660 SUPER run DayZ?

Great

The GeForce GTX 1660 SUPER handles DayZ well at 1080p, delivering approximately 534 FPS at High settings — above the 60 FPS target for smooth gameplay. It can also achieve smooth 1440p at around 401 FPS.

DayZGeForce GTX 1660 SUPER FPS Data

Quality1080p1440p4K
Low834 fps626 fps334 fps
Medium668 fps501 fps267 fps
High534 fps401 fps214 fps
Ultra434 fps325 fps174 fps

Estimated FPS · actual performance may vary based on drivers and settings

Minimum System Requirements

CPU
Intel Dual-Core 2.4 GHz or AMD Dual-Core Athlon 2.5 GHz
GPU
Nvidia GeForce 8800GT
RAM
2 GB

Genres

About

DayZ (2018) is a hardcore open-world survival game set in a post-apocalyptic landscape filled with infected zombies and desperate players. As an action-adventure MMO, it emphasizes brutal survival mechanics where you scavenge for resources, decide whether to cooperate or betray other survivors, and constantly battle the elements and undead threats. The game's appeal lies in its unforgiving, player-driven storytelling where every decision carries weight.

Running DayZ doesn't require cutting-edge hardware, making it reasonably accessible for most PC gamers. An entry-level GPU with a benchmark score around 4823 handles minimum requirements adequately, while a CPU scoring approximately 4384 provides baseline performance. To achieve stable FPS at higher graphics settings, we recommend at least a mid-range GPU. With 8 GB RAM minimum, performance scales nicely as you increase graphical fidelity, allowing players to customize their experience based on their system's capabilities.

With a rating of 50/100, DayZ appeals primarily to hardcore survival fans who value emergent gameplay over polish. If you enjoy tense multiplayer survival experiences and don't mind a rough around the edges presentation, it's worth checking our detailed benchmark data to see if your hardware meets performance targets.

More DayZ GPU benchmarks

Can GeForce GTX 1660 SUPER Run DayZ? — 534 FPS at 1080p | PCGameBenchmarks