Nearly 20 years after launch, Crysis is still demanding. Fresh benchmarks show how NVIDIA’s RTX 5090 handles the legendary game at 4K and 8K resolutions.
Crysis turns 20 next year, and the question that defined PC gaming for a generation still hasn’t fully gone away: can it run Crysis?
YouTube channel Testing Games decided to find out by testing the game on a top-tier 2026 gaming PC, built around NVIDIA’s flagship GeForce RTX 5090.
Test System
- CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 9800X3D
- Motherboard: MSI MPG X670E CARBON
- Memory: 32 GB DDR5-6000
- Cooling: be quiet! Dark Rock 5
- GPU: GeForce RTX 5090 (32 GB VRAM)
Original Crysis: 4K and 8K Results
Running the original Crysis at maximum settings produced the following results:
- 4K, Very High: ~190 FPS
- 8K, Very High: ~39 FPS
At 4K, the RTX 5090 handles the game effortlessly. At 8K, however, performance drops below smooth-play territory – a reminder that even modern flagship hardware has limits.
Crysis remastered performance
The remastered version of Crysis, which features updated visuals and heavier rendering techniques, proved even more demanding:
- 4K, Max Settings: ~120 FPS
- 8K, Max Settings: ~50 FPS
While 8K performance improves slightly compared to the original, it still falls short of consistently smooth gameplay.
Two decades later, Crysis remains a stress test – even for NVIDIA’s most powerful consumer GPU. The RTX 5090 crushes the game at 4K, but 8K gaming continues to push beyond what even flagship hardware can comfortably deliver.
Source: Testing Games (YouTube)
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