MOTORSLICE System Requirements

Wondering if your PC can handle megastructure parkour and chainsaw brawls at a stable pace? This page translates MOTORSLICE’s published PC baselines into practical guidance, including CPU and GPU expectations sourced from public requirement roundups.

Publisher-listed baseline

OS
Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
~3 GB available space
Notes
See Steam for any shipped CPU/GPU strings.

Detailed CPU and GPU lines vary by store listing; confirm on the official MOTORSLICE Steam page before building a new PC around this game.

Minimum requirements in plain terms

Publisher-facing baselines list Windows 10, eight gigabytes of system memory, and roughly three gigabytes of available storage. Those numbers tell you the gate for installation and basic play, but they do not guarantee sixty frames per second at high settings on integrated graphics. Think of minimum as playable, not luxurious. You should expect to lower camera follow effects or post-processing if you ride close to the floor. Close browser tabs, pause sync tools during sessions, and prefer wired controllers if Bluetooth adds input variance on your setup. Storage type matters less than free space health—keep several gigabytes free after install so shaders and caches can expand without stuttering.

Recommended hardware patterns

Public benchmark aggregators pair MOTORSLICE with mid-tier CPUs from recent generations and discrete GPUs capable of running modern Unreal-style action at 1080p with headroom. If your card sits a few years old, you may still be fine at medium presets if thermals stay clean. Recommended RAM often remains eight gigabytes for indie scope, but sixteen gigabytes on modern PCs reduces background pressure—useful if you stream or capture footage while playing. Always update GPU drivers before judging performance. Many day-one stutters trace to shader compilation or driver heuristics that patch quickly.

Operating system, compatibility layers, and handhelds

Windows 10 is the documented baseline; Windows 11 generally inherits compatibility for DirectX-driven indie titles but verify after launch if anticheat or DRM is announced. Proton and Deck compatibility on Linux or Steam Deck may work unofficially even when unlisted—watch Steam community reports rather than assuming either direction. We do not promise unofficial compatibility; buy where refund policies comfort you if experimenting.

Performance troubleshooting checklist

If inputs feel late, cap framerate near what your hardware sustains. If traversal stutters, watch for thermal throttling on laptops. If cutscenes hitch while gameplay is smooth, switch to borderless or exclusive fullscreen modes one at a time to test. Chainsaw particles can spike GPU load; stepping one notch down on effects often stabilizes pacing more than resolution drops. Multiplayer is not the focus here; online features should not affect requirements unless patches add them.

FAQs players ask before buying

Can my PC run MOTORSLICE? If you meet Windows 10, eight gigabytes RAM, a modest discrete GPU from the last several years, and clean thermals, you are likely fine at reasonable settings. Integrated graphics may work with compromises; discrete cards add smooth camera motion that helps platforming. Always cross-check the Steam page before purchase—publishers sometimes adjust listed CPUs or GPUs after beta feedback.
Play on Steam FAQ

FAQ

Can my PC run MOTORSLICE? +

If you meet Windows 10, 8 GB RAM, and reasonable GPU headroom with thermal stability, you likely can—tune appropriately.

Is 16 GB RAM worth it? +

Helpful for multitasking, not always mandatory if 8 GB matches publisher baseline.

Does SSD matter? +

SSDs reduce hitching for streaming environments; HDDs may work but feel less smooth.

Will it run on Steam Deck? +

Community reports after launch will clarify; Proton compatibility is unofficial until stated.

Where are official specs? +

The MOTORSLICE Steam page lists authoritative requirements.

What if I miss minimum storage? +

Free space before and after install avoids shader cache failures and update errors.