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Difference between revisions of "40d:System requirements"

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(various rewriting)
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Requires Windows 98 or newer
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Requires Windows NT 4.0, Windows 98, or newer
  
~100MB Disk Space: The game itself takes only about 20MBs, but savegames and screenshots (if you take them) use considerable amounts of harddisk space.
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~100MB Disk Space: The game itself takes only about 20MB, but savegames and screenshots (if you take them) use considerable amounts of harddisk space.
  
128MB RAM: Not much to say here, if you have the other requirements, you definately have this.
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256MB RAM: The game uses 150+ MB memory while running (more if you select a local grid larger than 6x6).  The more creatures, objects, and explored space on your map, the more memory you will need.  Most of this can be kept in virtual memory (disk swap), but be sure to have at least 500MB total (physical + virtual) memory available.  [[World generation]] requires 400MB at its peak.
  
 
Dwarf Fortress loves as much raw CPU power as you can provide it with.  Recommended:
 
Dwarf Fortress loves as much raw CPU power as you can provide it with.  Recommended:
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Athlon:  3000+ or higher
 
Athlon:  3000+ or higher
  
The more units there are and the larger the map area you choose, the harder your computer needs to work. Generally DF stirs every bit of juice out of your processor it gets, but you can play it (very slowly) with P3 766MHz.  If you're purchasing a new system, the fastest Core2Duo in your budget is strongly recommended.
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The larger your map and the more units on it, the harder your computer will need to work. Dwarf Fortress will take all the CPU power it is given, and will run at 50-100FPS on a modern system (5-10FPS on a P3 766MHz).  If you're purchasing a new system, a Core2Duo is recommended.
  
You'll also want enough video card to keep up with the CPU.  Integrated on-motherboard video cards are a bad idea, even a separate gaming-type video card that's several years old will satisfy DF under most circumstances.
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You'll also want a decent video card to keep up with the CPU.  Integrated on-motherboard video cards are a bad idea,{{verify}} but even a separate gaming-type video card that's several years old will satisfy DF under most circumstances.
  
===Dual Core Machines===
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===Dual-core machines===
  
If you're running a lot of things at once while playing Dwarf Fortress, open Task Manager and set everything to Core0, set DF to Core1.  You now have an entire core dedicated to running DF and you should eke out a slightly better performance.
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If you're running a lot of things at once while playing Dwarf Fortress, open Task Manager and set DF to Core1 and everything else to Core0.  You will now have an entire core dedicated to running DF, which should give slightly better performance.

Revision as of 23:25, 16 November 2007

Requires Windows NT 4.0, Windows 98, or newer

~100MB Disk Space: The game itself takes only about 20MB, but savegames and screenshots (if you take them) use considerable amounts of harddisk space.

256MB RAM: The game uses 150+ MB memory while running (more if you select a local grid larger than 6x6). The more creatures, objects, and explored space on your map, the more memory you will need. Most of this can be kept in virtual memory (disk swap), but be sure to have at least 500MB total (physical + virtual) memory available. World generation requires 400MB at its peak.

Dwarf Fortress loves as much raw CPU power as you can provide it with. Recommended:

Core2: 1.4GHz or higher

Pentium 4: 3.0GHz or higher

Athlon: 3000+ or higher

The larger your map and the more units on it, the harder your computer will need to work. Dwarf Fortress will take all the CPU power it is given, and will run at 50-100FPS on a modern system (5-10FPS on a P3 766MHz). If you're purchasing a new system, a Core2Duo is recommended.

You'll also want a decent video card to keep up with the CPU. Integrated on-motherboard video cards are a bad idea,[Verify] but even a separate gaming-type video card that's several years old will satisfy DF under most circumstances.

Dual-core machines

If you're running a lot of things at once while playing Dwarf Fortress, open Task Manager and set DF to Core1 and everything else to Core0. You will now have an entire core dedicated to running DF, which should give slightly better performance.