Can I Run Hades?
Wondering if your PC can run Hades? Released in 2020, it is a lightweight title for modern gaming PCs. Below you can detect your graphics card in the browser and get an exact FPS estimate at 1080p, 1440p and 4K, see how popular GPUs perform, and check the official minimum and recommended system requirements — all without downloading anything.
Will it run on your PC?
Detect your hardware or run the in-browser benchmark — get your Hades result instantly.
Instant, in-browser detection. No download, no sign-up.
Expected FPS by graphics card
High preset · average FPS · your benchmark may vary by CPU and settings.
| Graphics card | 1080p | 1440p | 4K |
|---|---|---|---|
| GTX 1060 6GB | 200 fps | 170 fps | 124 fps |
| RTX 3060 | 300 fps | 300 fps | 229 fps |
| RTX 4060 | 300 fps | 300 fps | 242 fps |
| RX 6700 XT | 300 fps | 300 fps | 285 fps |
| RTX 4070 | 300 fps | 300 fps | 300 fps |
| RTX 4090 | 300 fps | 300 fps | 300 fps |
System requirements
Minimum
- CPU
- Dual Core 2.4 GHz
- GPU
- 1GB VRAM / DirectX 10+ support
- RAM
- 4 GB RAM
- Storage
- 15 GB available space
- OS *
- Windows 7 SP1
Recommended
- CPU
- Dual Core 3.0 GHz+
- GPU
- 2GB VRAM / DirectX 10+ support
- RAM
- 8 GB RAM
- Storage
- 20 GB available space
- OS *
- Windows 7 SP1
Hades — frequently asked questions
Can I run Hades on my PC?
Hades is a lightweight game. The fastest way to know is to run the instant in-browser check above — it detects your graphics card and shows your estimated FPS in seconds. You can also compare your GPU against the table below.
What FPS will I get in Hades at 1080p?
On a mainstream RTX 3060 you can expect around 300 FPS in Hades at 1080p on high settings. Faster cards push well above 60 FPS; check the full table for your exact GPU.
Can a budget or older GPU run Hades?
An entry-level GTX 1060 6GB gets roughly 200 FPS in Hades at 1080p. Lowering the preset to medium or low improves that further — run the benchmark above for a precise read on your own hardware.
Is the Hades FPS estimate accurate?
Our estimates come from real benchmark data across reference GPUs, interpolated for your card — typically within about 15%. Measured data points are labelled as such, and you can run the in-browser benchmark for a result tuned to your exact PC.






