Horizon Forbidden West is a marvel — if your PC can handle the heat
More than two years after its release on PS5, Horizon Forbidden West is now available on PC. The original game, Horizon Zero Dawn, has become a mainstay for performance testing on PC, and it’s one of the pillars of our GPU reviews. The sequel ups the ante in a big way with more graphics options and a more demanding world overall.
I’ve been playing the game over the past week, drilling down on the best settings, comparing DLSS, FSR, and XeSS, and testing the bounds of performance. Horizon Forbidden West lives up to the standard set by the original release, though weaker GPUs with only 8GB of memory will struggle with high graphics settings and resolutions.
Best settings for Horizon Forbidden West PC
Horizon Forbidden West has a ton of graphics options. After digging through them, here are the best settings for Horizon Forbidden West to balance performance and image quality on PC:
- Texture Quality: Medium
- Texture Filtering: 2x Anisotropic
- Shadow Quality: Low
- Screen Space Shadows: On
- Ambient Occlusion: SSAO
- Screen Space Reflections: Low
- Level of Detail: Medium
- Hair Quality: Medium
- Terrain Quality: Medium
- Water Quality: Low
- Clouds Quality: Medium
- Translucency Quality: Default
- Parallax Occlusion Mapping: On
- Depth of Field: High
- Bloom: On
- Motion Blur Strength: 0
- Sharpness: 5
- Lens Flares: On
- Vignette: On
- Radial Blur: On
- Chromatic Aberration: On
- Anti-Aliasing: TAA or upscaling
This is a starting point. In Horizon Forbidden West, you’ll see your graphics changes updated in real time as you adjust settings — no restarts required. This is the list I’d start with, but definitely take the time to adjust further for your own PC. Tweaking isn’t a hassle in Horizon Forbidden West as it is in other PC releases like Dragon’s Dogma 2.
Above, you can see how my recommended settings stack up against the Very High and Very Low presets. You’re getting most of the quality of the Very High preset with