The stored profile rates CPU sensitivity as Medium. A balanced modern processor should handle typical play, but high-refresh targets or the busiest scenes can still reveal a main-thread limit. Use a sustainable frame cap in Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order; chasing short peaks can hide processor-side frame-time spikes.
Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order FPS Calculator: Estimate PC Performance
Use the dedicated Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order FPS calculator with the game already selected. Compare CPUs, GPUs, resolutions, and optional settings, then review practical guidance for visual quality, GPU load, resolution scaling, and stable frame times.
Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order FPS Calculator
Practical 1440p starting preset with a balanced CPU, GPU, 8 GB RAM, and High graphics
About Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order PC performance
Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order belongs to a Adventure performance class where dense environments, traversal, lighting, crowds, and asset streaming shift the bottleneck from area to area. The calculator is a comparison tool, not a promise that every map, match, race, or save will produce the same frame rate.
No engine is named because the offline source registry does not contain a reliable engine citation for this title. The stored demand model rates CPU sensitivity as Medium and GPU sensitivity as High. Settings such as shadows, volumetrics, reflections are the first places to test, but the limiting component should be confirmed with utilization and frame-time data.
A low preset can reveal CPU or simulation limits, while higher resolutions and visual settings shift more of the workload to the GPU. Compare both a performance-focused and a quality-focused setup before deciding which component needs attention. This page is intended for players planning visually rich 1080p, 1440p, ultrawide, or 4K open-world setups. The loaded hardware configuration is only a sensible example for Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order; every visible calculator input remains editable.
This is an editable example, not a universal recommendation.
CPU, GPU, RAM, and VRAM sensitivity
GPU sensitivity is rated High. Resolution, effects, and image-quality settings can move average FPS substantially, especially above 1080p. In Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order, test shadows and volumetrics before reducing every setting at once, and confirm that FPS rises when GPU load is reduced.
The internal profile uses 8 GB as a planning value, not an official requirement. Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order is not expected to need unusually large capacity in the stored profile, but paging, browser tabs, recording software, and overlays can still cause stutter on a nearly full system.
VRAM sensitivity is rated High because Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order is profiled as a demanding graphics workload. High-resolution textures, ultrawide or 4K output, and heavy effects can consume headroom quickly. Reduce textures only when memory pressure is visible; otherwise tune effects first.
Recommended starting presets for Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order
Use these presets as starting points and adjust them after checking a busy, repeatable scene.
| Preset | Resolution | Quality | Anti-aliasing | Refresh target | Textures | Shadows | View distance | Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Balanced | 1080p or 1440p | Medium to High | Game default or light temporal AA | 60–144 Hz | High if memory allows | Medium | Medium/High | Start here before changing one heavy option at a time. |
| High Quality | 1440p | High | Quality-focused AA | 60–120 Hz | High | High | High | Keep a realistic cap and watch GPU utilization. |
| Maximum Visuals | 1440p or 4K | Very High, selectively tuned | Highest practical AA | 45–90 Hz | High | High | High | Use only after the balanced preset is stable. |
| Low-End PC | 720p or 1080p | Low | Off or lightweight AA | 30–60 Hz | Low/Medium | Low | Low/Medium | Reduce shadows and volumetrics before lowering render resolution further. |
Game-specific tuning order
- Start with the High preset rather than maximum settings
- Reduce shadows, reflections, volumetrics, and post-processing one step at a time
- Keep textures within available VRAM
Resolution guidance from 720p to 4K
| Resolution | Practical guidance | Best fit | Likely limit |
|---|---|---|---|
| 720p | Useful for older hardware and CPU-limit diagnosis. A small gain over 1080p suggests the processor or simulation is already the constraint. | Low-end hardware; native rendering first. | Usually CPU-limited at high FPS; VRAM pressure is normally lower. |
| 1080p | The practical baseline for Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order, suitable for low-end to mid-range systems and clean setting comparisons. | Low-end to mid-range; 60–240 Hz depending on genre and hardware. | A balanced CPU/GPU limit is common at medium or high settings. |
| 1440p | A useful target for mainstream GPUs. Check 1% lows and GPU headroom before raising every option. | Mid-range to high-end hardware. | More likely GPU-limited; texture memory begins to matter more. |
| 3440×1440 ultrawide | Renders about one-third more pixels than standard 1440p, increasing GPU and VRAM load. Verify interface and field-of-view behavior. | Upper-mid-range to high-end hardware. | Usually GPU-limited; lower effects or shadows before textures when memory is healthy. |
| 4K | Primarily a GPU test. Native 4K may be impractical on modest hardware. Use an upscaler only after current support is verified. | High-end hardware or a carefully tuned 60 Hz target. | Strongly GPU-limited; VRAM and texture settings deserve close attention. |
Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order performance troubleshooting
Check VRAM use before raising texture quality at ultrawide or 4K. Exceeding the practical budget can cause severe frame-time spikes.
Test Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order while moving quickly through a dense area. Indoor scenes can hide streaming, crowd, and traversal limits.
If performance drops only in busy districts while GPU use falls, reduce crowd or simulation settings and inspect per-core CPU load.
If the GPU stays near full use, lower reflections, volumetrics, shadows, or render resolution one step at a time.
Allow shader compilation to finish after updates. Repeated traversal should become more consistent if cache building was the cause.
How to read the calculator output safely
Results are estimates based on selected hardware, game demand, resolution, graphics settings, and optional inputs. Actual performance may vary because of drivers, game updates, cooling, power limits, RAM configuration, background applications, and individual system conditions.
Use the result to compare scenarios, then validate the final build with current independent testing in a repeatable scene. The tool does not run Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order, inspect the computer, or provide a measured result supplied by the game publisher.
Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order performance FAQs
Is Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order more CPU-heavy or GPU-heavy?
The profile rates CPU sensitivity as Medium and GPU sensitivity as High. Resolution, preset, scene complexity, and frame target can change the limit; confirm it with utilization data.
Which Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order settings usually reduce FPS most?
Start with shadows, volumetrics, reflections. Change one setting at a time and check GPU utilization and frame time.
Is 8 GB of RAM enough for Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order?
8 GB is an internal planning value, not an official requirement. The RAM rating is Low; mods, recording, hosting, and large saves can raise use.
What resolution should I start with for Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order?
Start at 1080p. Use 720p to diagnose a CPU limit, 1440p for sharper output, and ultrawide or 4K as GPU and VRAM tests.
How important is VRAM for Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order?
VRAM sensitivity is rated High. Resolution, textures, mods, and effects raise use; stutter or pop-in can indicate pressure.