ModerateReleased 2013 · PC

Can I Run Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell Blacklist?

Wondering if your PC can run Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell Blacklist? Released in 2013, it is a moderate 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 Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell Blacklist result instantly.

Instant, in-browser detection. No download, no sign-up.

System requirements

Minimum

CPU
2.53 GHz Intel® Core™2 Duo E6400 or 2.80 GHz AMD Athlon™ 64 X2 5600+ or better
GPU
512 MB DirectX® 10–compliant with Shader Model 4.0 or higher
RAM
2 GB RAM
Sound
DirectX 10–compliant DirectX 9.0c–compliant
OS *
Originally released for Windows 7, the game can be played on Windows 10 and Windows 11 OS
DirectX®
9
Hard Drive
25 GB HD space
Additional
Peripherals Supported: Windows-compatible keyboard, mouse, headset, optional controller (Xbox 360 Controller for Windows recommended). Requires UPL…

Recommended

CPU
2.66 GHz Intel® Core™2 Quad Q8400 or 3.00 GHz AMD Phenom™ II X4 940 or better
RAM
4 GB RAM
Sound
(5.1 surround sound recommended)
DirectX®
11
Hard Drive
25 GB HD space
Other Requirements
Broadband Internet connection
Additional
Peripherals Supported: Windows-compatible keyboard, mouse, headset, optional controller (Xbox 360 Controller for Windows recommended). Requires UPL…

Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell Blacklist — frequently asked questions

Can I run Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell Blacklist on my PC?

Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell Blacklist is a moderate 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.

Is the Tom Clancy’s Splinter Cell Blacklist 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.

More games to check

All games →