Update (05/06/25): Following the launch of Radeon RX 9060 XT 16GB and 8GB, we’ve updated this guide to include the graphics card. This includes entries in charts as well as amendments throughout the piece in light of its release, prompting changes to our assessment of the game and recommendations.
It’s been half a decade since we last ripped and tore through Doom Eternal, and now Doom: The Dark Ages is suiting up to give the franchise a new coat of blood-red paint.
Set long before the events of the modern reboot saga, Doom: The Dark Ages transports players to a world soaked in gothic horror, where the Slayer trades platforming acrobatics for the brutal stomp of a one-man war machine. The developers at id Software suitably call it a return to roots – a grounded, “stand and fight” shooter, reminiscent of classic Doom but layered with the intensity and spectacle expected of 2025’s most anticipated releases.
To complement this shift in combat philosophy, The Dark Ages introduces a visceral array of medieval weaponry. Alongside familiar firearms, players wield brutal melee instruments such as an iron flail, a spiked Dreadmace, and a devastating power gauntlet. Perhaps the most striking addition is a Shield Saw complete with chainsaw blades, promising both offensive and defensive capabilities, and you’re going to want to block and parry as often as you can.

Beyond core combat, The Dark Ages has large explorable environments, described as “Doom sandboxes” filled with secrets. Unique set pieces also feature prominently, including the ability to pilot a massive, 30-story mech called Atlan in battles against colossal demons and to take flight on a cybernetic dragon in sequences inspired by flight sim dogfights.
Notably, Doom: The Dark Ages does not include a multiplayer mode, allowing the development team to focus entirely on the single-player experience. While this is a departure from prior games in the series, it’s part and parcel with the developer’s intentions to go back to basics and follow the original formula.
System requirements
Minimum 1080p / 60fps / Low | Recommended 1440p / 60fps / High | Ultra 4K 2160p / 60 FPS / Ultra | |
---|---|---|---|
OS | Windows 10 64-bit Windows 11 64-bit | Windows 10 64-bit Windows 11 64-bit | Windows 10 64-bit Windows 11 64-bit |
CPU | AMD Ryzen 7 3700X Intel Core i7-10700K | AMD Ryzen 7 5700X Intel Core i7-12700K | AMD Ryzen 7 5700X Intel Core i7-12700K |
RAM | 16GB | 32GB | 32GB |
GPU | AMD Radeon RX 6600 Nvidia GeForce RTX 2060 Super | AMD Radeon RX 6800 Nvidia GeForce RTX 3080 | AMD Radeon RX 7900 XT Nvidia GeForce RTX 4080 |
VRAM | 8GB | 10GB | 16GB |
Storage | 100GB SSD | 100GB SSD | 100GB SSD |
A new direction in gameplay also means new expectations for your rig. If you’re hoping to slay at even the most basic settings, you’ll need more than an ageing budget graphics card. The minimum spec sets the standard at no less than an 8GB GPU with ray tracing capabilities, highlighting Nvidia GeForce RTX 2060 Super or AMD Radeon RX 6600 as prime examples. This might sound steep, but considering previous id Tech 7 Engine games like Indiana Jones and the Great Circle made similar demands in 2024, it’s clearly the new normal for id Tech 8.
Minimum CPUs are no slouches either, eyeing up six-core, 12-thread models at minimum to do the heavy lifting across all resolutions and settings. AMD’s Ryzen 5 3600X or Intel’s Core i5-11600K, both mid-tier chips from the past six years, still pack enough punch to handle Argent D’Nur at 60fps on low settings. The game needs at least 16GB of RAM, and you’ll want to reserve a solid 100GB of SSD storage. If id’s track record is anything to go by, that number will only rise post-launch.
Bump the resolution up and the picture gets a lot more next-gen. No less than Ryzen 7 5700X or Core i7-12700K sits at the heart of the action for both, paired with 32GB. How much oomph your graphics card packs will determine whether you can crank it up to 1440p or 4K. You’ll need at least 10GB of VRAM for QHD with Bethesda pointing you in the direction of AMD Radeon RX 6800, while all-out UHD will push even 16GB models like AMD Radeon RX 7800 XT to the brink.
The beauty is that Bethesda and id Software don’t once set the bar below silky-smooth 60fps no matter the resolution or settings, so you don’t miss a single bit of the gloriously gory action.

Game engine
id Tech 8 makes its grand debut here, promising to “usher in a new era of gameplay performance and visual fidelity.” Marketing fluff aside, it’s a serious upgrade. Fully dynamic lighting and ray traced global illumination are now a core part of the visual package, while environments scale significantly larger than anything seen in previous Doom entries.
Graphics
Visuals take a substantial leap forward. In keeping with the slightly more grounded, medieval aesthetic, everything from dungeon interiors to sprawling open fields gets a heavy touch of moody lighting and dense particle work. Ray tracing plays a central role this time, and it’s not just about prettier reflections. Lighting and shadows actively influence gameplay visibility and tone. Thankfully, upscalers like FSR help balance the cost, particularly at higher resolutions.

Movement
Whereas Doom Eternal was more “float like a butterfly, sting like a bee,” The Dark Ages follows more of a ‘when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object’ philosophy. The Slayer approaches enemies like a tank, slower and more deliberate, with no double jump or dashing abilities. Just simple boots on the ground. You’ll still hop like a bunny from time to time, but you’re far more dependent on decimating demons with your shield risen and weathering oncoming storms rather than avoiding them entirely.

Performance testing
The jump from id Tech 7 to id Tech 8 is significant, not just in graphical complexity but in how the engine interacts with your system resources. Dynamic ray traced lighting and shadows are mandatory, meaning even minimum spec GPUs need to support them at low settings. That’s a stark departure from previous Doom games where ray tracing was a bonus toggle, not a baked-in feature.
Such a high bar is naturally harder to hit, placing Sapphire’s RX 5700 XT (8GB) out of the running. The memory on Team Red’s first-gen RDNA graphics card already skirts a fine line with The Dark Ages, but it sadly doesn’t make the cut due to its lack of ray tracing capabilities, instead prompting an error (seen below) rather than booting.
Meanwhile, RX 6700 XT (12GB) chugs away right up until particle effects enter the mix at higher settings, causing a crash and forcing me to shut down the game from Task Manager. You’ll get away with the lowest settings, but it’s safe to say you’ll benefit far more from current or previous-gen Radeon cards.

Thus, digging deep into our repertoire of Sapphire Radeon graphics cards, the full lineup of benchmarked GPUs includes:
- Sapphire Nitro+ Radeon RX 9070 XT
- Sapphire Pulse Radeon RX 9070
- Sapphire Nitro+ Radeon RX 9060 XT 16GB
- Sapphire Nitro+ Radeon RX 7900 XTX
- Sapphire Pulse Radeon RX 7900 XT
- Sapphire Nitro+ Radeon RX 7800 XT
- Sapphire Pure Radeon RX 7700 XT
- Sapphire Pulse Radeon RX 7600 XT
- Sapphire Pulse Radeon RX 7600
Each card benefits from the latest driver available at the time of writing. To keep latency as consistent as possible, in this section I’ve stuck to TAA rather than relying on upscalers and frame gen technology from FSR.

Our 7950X3D Test PCs
Club386 carefully chooses each component in a test bench to best suit the review at hand. When you view our benchmarks, you’re not just getting an opinion, but the results of rigorous testing carried out using hardware we trust.
Shop Club386 test platform components:
CPU:Â AMD Ryzen 9 7950X3D
Motherboard:Â MSI MEG X670E ACE
Cooler:Â Arctic Liquid Freezer III 420 A-RGB
Memory:Â 64GB Kingston Fury Beast DDR5
Storage:Â 2TB WD_Black SN850X NVMe SSD
PSU:Â be quiet! Dark Power Pro 13 1,300W
Chassis:Â Fractal Design Torrent Grey
Accompanying the Radeons is our tried-and-trusted suite of test hardware, including a 16-core Ryzen 9 7950X3D at its heart. AMD’s 3D V-Cache is the natural fit for high-performance gaming, and Doom: The Dark Ages needs all the frames it can get without tarnishing its medieval flair.
To cover all bases, I’ve tested the brand-new boomer shooter across FHD, QHD, and UHD, but be forewarned, there’s a reason id Software calls the top preset Ultra Nightmare. Fortunately, PC gaming comes with a sense of comfort being able to customise your settings to your liking, so this is simply the pinnacle. That is, of course, until the developer introduces path tracing settings later down the line.

Benchmarks

Entry-level graphics cards from yesteryear struggle to hit that coveted 60fps marker at 1920×1080 when running the highest settings possible, but midrange alternatives sprint away with the baton.
RX 9060 XT 16GB currently occupies the mainstream space for FHD gamers, rocking a starting price of $350. Accruing an average of 86fps, it makes short work of the shooter. Saturating higher, triple-figure refresh rates nudges you towards the more-expensive RX 9070 which runs Doom: The Dark Ages at a silky 127fps on average, with RX 9070 XT pushing the performance ceiling all the way up to 150fps.
RX 7000 Series cards from RX 7700 XT upwards provide comfortable performance for prospective upgraders. However, the value of RX 9000 Series doesn’t stop at raw performance as the family is more efficient and boasts support for FSR 4.

As resolutions climb higher, so do the requirements to reach an acceptable frame rate using Ultra Nightmare settings. For an ideal experience at native QHD, you’ll want nothing less than RX 7800 XT but its 62fps average doesn’t leave much headroom for error.
RX 9070 provides a welcome buffer above that all-important 60fps threshold, ripping and tearing at a rock-solid 85fps. It even squeaks past RX 7900 XT by a cheeky 2fps. Meanwhile, RX 9070 XT continues to lead the charge as the only card on the board to break past 100fps.
Doomslayer isn’t exactly bouncing around everywhere like he was in Doom Eternal which makes slower frame rates a touch more acceptable. Even so, you want performance as high as possible to give you plenty of time to react to demons, projectiles, and other hazards.

Those seeking to achieve 60fps at UHD will need to either dial settings back or employ FSR upscaling, as Ultra Nightmare puts that goal just out of reach. Still, you can spot the same trend no matter the resolution, allowing you to establish expectations.
For such a lofty resolution, you’ll need nothing short of AMD’s best: RX 9070 XT. The flagship card hits 52fps on average without the assistance of upscaling but such a helping hand sees it safely over 60fps. RX 7900 XTX comes close to matching the current champion but it’s tough to recommend the previous-gen king on account of pricing and availability, but it’s still well worth considering if you find one cheap enough.
AMD FSR
There’s a reason AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution (FSR) is built into id Tech 8 from day one, and Doom: The Dark Ages wastes no time putting it to work. Native rendering might showcase the new engine in all its glory, but even the beefiest cards can struggle to maintain that buttery-smooth 60fps once the blood starts flying.
Switching from native to FSR Quality can result in staggering uplifts of up to 63% in our testing. Activate Frame Generation on top and you’re looking at a monstrous 165% boost overall. Such increases turn RX 9070 XT and RX 9070 into absolute beasts at 4K, with RX 7800 XT even becoming viable option at the same solution.
While RX 9060 XT 16GB also punches through the same barrier as its peers using FSR and FG, I’d recommend sticking in its FHD and QHD lane. Without a 60fps base frame rate with upscaling, you risk going beyond a reasonable latency when generating frames at UHD.
The beauty of Doom: The Dark Ages is that it scales exceptionally well across most resolutions with FSR in play. For Team Red users, it’s a hell of a tool, and one that turns good frame rates into great ones. And with FSR 3.1 support baked in, you can Override to FSR 4 using Radeon 9000 GPUs, vastly improving visual quality.
Efficiency and value

The price of a graphics card doesn’t just come down to the upfront cost, but how much we pay over the course of its lifetime. After all, energy ain’t cheap nowadays. Packed with enthusiast hardware, our test build isn’t exactly your run-of-the-mill config, but some GPUs are certainly hungrier than others. Not only is RX 9070 XT kinder to your bank account at the counter than RX 7900 XTX, it’s easier on the monthly bills, too.
With energy prices rising to £0.28 per kWh in the UK during its April-June 2025 window, completing the 20-hour Doom: The Dark Ages campaign would cost £3.04 using RX 7900 XTX, but this falls to £2.72 with RX 9070 XT. By far and large, the standard RX 9070 offers exceptional savings in the long-run, with a leisurely stroll through the story costing you just £1.98. Better still, RX 9060 XT 16GB only puts a £1.74 dent into your bank. Just think of how many pennies this racks up throughout the year.

It’s no surprise, then, that Radeon RX 9070 also aces the Club386 Efficiency Rating, grabbing the gold medal. We assign this by taking the average UHD frame rate for each card and then divide it by system-wide power consumption. It’s difficult to go wrong with upgrading to RDNA 4, if you’re coming from 7000 Series.

Using a similar formula, but this time replacing power consumption with MSRP, we get Club386’s Value Rating instead. Once again, AMD’s latest graphics cards have a stellar showing.
On the high-end, RX 9070 XT is worth around 74% more than RX 7900 XTX while RX 9070 bests RX 7900 XT by 66%. Scaling down to RX 9060 XT though is fruitful too, besting RX 7800 XT by a cool 29% in terms of value.
Summary
Straight out of the gate, Doom: The Dark Ages asserts itself as one of the most technically ambitious shooters in recent memory. Powered by the all-new id Tech 8 engine, it marks a significant step forward not just for the series, but for first-person games in general. The scale is bigger, the lighting bolder, and the gore somehow gorier.

It’s a more grounded take on Doom’s famously frantic formula, yet it never sacrifices the series’ trademark savagery. This bodes well for my aging bones, as my twitch-shooting, trick-shot days are long behind me, but the change in pace will certainly rub some newer fans of the series the wrong way.
We’ve been running our tests straight from Xbox Game Pass, but you can get the FPS game from almost anywhere thanks to Bethesda’s liberal publishing strategy. It’s also on Steam, Battle.net, and consoles, although it’s curiously missing from Epic Games Store.
The main question is what GPU to upgrade to in order to be able to run it at a decent frame rate. The good news is that performance scales well on the current crop of Radeons, so long as you pick your resolution wisely.

For Full HD (1920×1080), RX 9060 XT is our best-value pick. Averaging 86fps with minimums dipping no lower than 53fps on Ultra Nightmare settings, it delivers a fluid experience without breaking the bank.
At QHD (2560×1440), RX 9070 takes the award. It breezes through the action at 85fps on average, with minimums keeping their head above water at 61fps.
UHD (3840×2160) is where reality checks in. RX 9070 XT can’t muster the grunt to deliver a 60fps experience at native 4K, stopping just shy with a 52fps average. However, turning on FSR sees it rise to the occasion with high quality upscaling to boot thanks to an easy FSR 4 upgrade. Alternatively, you could always turn a few settings down in the name of prioritising resolution.

Best for UHD: Sapphire Nitro+ Radeon RX 9070 XT
The best Radeon that money can buy, there’s nothing more capable of tackling Doom: The Dark Ages at UHD. Read our review.

Best for QHD: Sapphire Pulse Radeon RX 9070
Boasting spritely QHD frame rates, this card comes close to matching the might of its XT sibling with a lower price tag. Read our review.

Best for FHD: Sapphire Nitro+ Radeon RX 9060 XT 16GB
With an affordable price tag, it delivers silky-smooth FHD gameplay and keeps The Dark Ages firmly in the game rather than real-life. Read our review.
All in all, AMD’s latest 9000 Series delivers in spades. Across every tested resolution, RDNA 4 shows up strong, balancing performance, power efficiency, and price with far more poise than the outgoing generation. Stick FSR 4 on top, even if it’s replacing native FSR 3.1, and there’s nothing quite like the latest generation.