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What matters for Metro Exodus
Metro Exodus is a story-driven first-person shooter set in the ruins of post-apocalyptic Russia, blending exploration, survival, and tense gunplay across large semi-open environments. It is built on 4A Games' proprietary engine, which pushes heavy graphical effects — volumetric lighting and fog, particle systems, tessellation, dynamic weather — that load the GPU more than most shooters. At 1080p, Metro Exodus is the most forgiving of the common PC gaming resolutions. A mid-range graphics card can handle high settings at this resolution without struggling, which makes 1080p the sweet spot for players who want to experience the game's atmosphere without jumping into expensive premium hardware.
The Enhanced Edition, which is a free upgrade, adds full ray-traced global illumination and other visual improvements. Even at 1080p, ray tracing puts real pressure on the GPU, so an RT-capable card is worth considering if you want that extra layer of lighting realism. CPU demands stay moderate throughout; the engine scales well with modern six-core processors and does not need eight or more cores to perform correctly. RAM is more important than it might seem — the game streams assets across open areas, and systems with less than 16 GB are more prone to stutter and hitching during traversal. Storage speed matters less but an SSD shortens load times noticeably compared to a hard drive.
If you are researching a gaming PC or PC build for Metro Exodus at 1080p, the practical takeaway is that the GPU drives almost everything. A capable mid-range graphics card, a current-generation six-core CPU, and 16 GB of memory form a reliable foundation. Spending more on CPU cores, faster RAM beyond a sensible baseline, or a premium motherboard does not meaningfully change the experience at this resolution.