Can My PC Run inZOI?
Compare your PC specifications with the requirements below to see whether your system can run the game smoothly.
inZOI System Requirements
Below are the system requirements for inZOI, including CPU, GPU, RAM, and free space.
- OS
- Windows 10/11
- CPU
- Intel i5 10400 / AMD Ryzen 5 3600
- GPU
- NVIDIA RTX 2060 (6G VRAM) / AMD Radeon RX 5600 XT (6G VRAM)
- RAM
- 12GB
- Free Space
- 40GB
Minimum Requirements
- OS
- Windows 10/11
- CPU
- intel i7 12700k / AMD Ryzen 7 7800x3D
- GPU
- NVIDIA RTX 3070 (8G VRAM) / AMD Radeon RX 6800 XT (16GB VRAM)
- RAM
- 16GB
- Free Space
- 60GB
Recommended Requirements
What These Requirements Mean
A quick breakdown of what these system requirements mean and which components matter most for performance.
The Recommended CPU Requirement Is Exceptionally High
The most unusual part of this spec sheet is the recommended CPU tier. An Intel Core i7-12700K or AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D is far above what many games list as a typical recommended processor. That immediately suggests this game may depend more heavily on CPU performance than the average title. When a developer sets the recommended CPU this high, it often points to heavier real-time processing demands such as simulation load, AI activity, object density, frame-time stability, or a design target built around higher frame rates rather than simple launchability. Even without knowing the game itself, this requirement list strongly suggests that CPU performance could have a major impact on how smooth and responsive the game feels.
The Gap Between Minimum and Recommended Suggests Two Very Different Experiences
This spec sheet shows a much wider jump between minimum and recommended than usual, especially on the CPU side. The minimum setup of an i5-10400 or Ryzen 5 3600 with an RTX 2060 or RX 5600 XT looks like a realistic starting point for basic play. But the recommended setup moves all the way to an i7-12700K or Ryzen 7 7800X3D alongside an RTX 3070 or RX 6800 XT. That kind of leap suggests the minimum requirements are closer to “the game runs” while the recommended requirements are aimed at a much more stable, fluid, and responsive experience. In other words, this appears to be the kind of game where technically meeting the minimum may still leave a large gap between playable performance and genuinely satisfying performance.
The RAM and Storage Requirements Point Away From a Massive Asset-Heavy Game
Another revealing detail is that the memory and storage numbers are relatively restrained compared with the sharp jump in CPU power. The game asks for 12GB RAM minimum, 16GB recommended, and only 40GB to 60GB of free space. That is not the usual profile of a huge modern open-world game built around extremely large texture packs and very heavy asset streaming. Those games often demand far more storage and increasingly treat 16GB as the minimum rather than the recommendation. Here, the lower storage footprint and more moderate memory requirement suggest the game may be less about raw asset size and more about processing demands. That makes this spec sheet look more like a game where CPU and overall compute performance matter more than install size alone.
Final Takeaway
If you had to reduce this spec sheet to its most important message, it would be this: the standout feature is not the storage requirement or even the memory requirement, but the unusually strong recommended CPU target. That, combined with the large gap between minimum and recommended hardware, suggests a game where the difference between simply running the game and getting a truly smooth experience could be substantial. At the same time, the moderate RAM and storage figures imply that this is probably not a giant asset-heavy title in the usual sense. Taken together, these requirements point to a game where processing power, especially CPU strength, may define the real quality of the experience more than beginners would expect.