Borderlands 4 has finally arrived, bringing with it a vibrant, seamless open world powered by Unreal Engine 5, albeit at lower FPS than gamers would like and with very frequent stuttering. While the new technology delivers a visually stunning evolution for the franchise, it also presents a colossal challenge for even the most powerful PC hardware. This guide provides Vault Hunters with practical strategies to achieve smooth FPS and fully enjoy the thrilling visuals of Pandora’s dynamic future.
Let’s get the numbers out of the way. Borderlands 4’s official requirements set a high bar – and benchmarks show even higher hurdles:
|
Tier |
CPU | GPU | VRAM | RAM | Target Performance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum | i7-9700 / Ryzen 7 2700X | RTX 2070 / RX 5700 XT | 8GB | 16GB | 1080p, 30 FPS Low |
| Recommended | i7-12700 / Ryzen 7 5800X | RTX 3080 / RX 6800 XT | 12GB | 32GB | 1440p, 60 FPS Medium |
On high-end hardware, 4K Ultra settings yield 30-40 FPS even for a RTX 5090. Framerates plunge at native resolutions, and upscaling isn’t just recommended...it’s mandatory. Think of recommended specs as the minimum for upscaled, not native gameplay. Take a look at our full Borderlands 4 System Requirements page for some additional information.
At 1080p and 1440p, even premium cards stumble. Here’s a snapshot based on compiled benchmarks at various settings:
| GPU | 1080p High | 1440p High | 4K Ultra |
|---|---|---|---|
| RTX 5090 | ~100 FPS | ~77 FPS | ~45 FPS |
| RTX 4090 | ~91 FPS | ~67 FPS | ~36 FPS |
| RTX 3080 | ~46 FPS | ~36 FPS | ~19 FPS |
| RX 7900 XTX | ~70 FPS | ~50 FPS | ~28 FPS |
Without upscaling, native performance on all tiers falls short of the coveted 60 FPS threshold. The solution? Upscaling is required for playable framerates at any resolution over 1080p.
|
Recommended |
Why it matters |
|
|---|---|---|
|
Lighting Quality |
Medium |
The biggest FPS win (roughly +10–27% depending on scene). Lumen is heavy; Medium maintains look with far less cost. |
|
Reflections Quality |
Low |
Surprisingly large uplift (double‑digit gains reported). Minimal visual loss in combat chaos. |
|
Volumetric Fog/Clouds |
Low–Medium |
Clouds/fog eat frames; stepping down recovers smoothness. |
|
Shadows (incl. Directional) |
Medium |
Reliable 3–8% back without wrecking image stability. |
|
Foliage Density |
Medium or Low |
Big perf tax outdoors; drop early on mid‑range rigs. |
|
Textures |
Very High only if ≥12 GB VRAM |
Looks great and cheap if you have the VRAM; otherwise go Medium/Low to avoid stutter. |
Tip: Avoid the “Badass” preset. In our testing it offers almost no visual improvement over "Very High" for a massive, inefficient performance drop.
Since native resolution is off the table, your first stop should be the upscaling menu.
For those with the latest cards,
If you have an older card, check out Lossless Scaling! We have a guide on how to make use of this powerful software
Here’s how some more advanced but optional tips and known issues driven and found by the Community:
At time of writing, you cannot really buy your way into great performance for this game. Even on crazy high-end systems, issues remain. However, upgrading a few components can alleviate these issues to an extent.
32GB of RAM is strongly recommended. Not only because it will help here, but because it's one of the few PC upgrades that will improve every aspect of your PC performance regardless of if you're gaming or not. 32GB of VENGEANCE RGB DDR5 is the sweet spot, but if you're not yet on a chipset that can handle DDR5, then 32GB of VENGEANCE RGB PRO DDR4 will still help.
Additionally, with reports of people getting CPU-bound on this game, making sure that poor little chip stays cool will be handy, so a 360mm AIO is a good option. an iCUE LINK TITAN 360 RX is our best-performing CPU cooler right now, but the NAUTILUS 360 RS is not far behind and significantly cheaper.
If you're truly keen to get as much performance as you can from Borderlands 4, and have the cash on hand, then an Nvidia 50-Series GPU or 9070 / 9070 XT from AMD will improve things, though not as much as you might hope.
Do I really need 32 GB of RAM?
For smooth streaming in this open world, yes 32 GB helps reduce hitching, especially alongside a fast SSD.
Why does my GPU show low usage while FPS is low?
You’re likely CPU‑bound; BL4’s streaming and world simulation can max out modern CPUs. Drop CPU‑heavy settings (Lighting, Foliage) and keep background apps closed.
Which upscaler should I use on AMD?
Start with TSR (often cleaner at aggressive scales), then compare FSR. Image preference varies by scene try both.
Is Frame Generation worth it?
Only if your base FPS is healthy (≥60–80).
Why does Borderlands 4 get worse the longer I play?
A memory leak is commonly reported. Until an official fix is available, it's advisable to restart the game between extended play sessions.
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