

Until the first big patch for Windows 11 arrives, circa Spring 2022, then you're neither losing out in terms of features or gaming frame rates running Windows 10. The effective gaming performance seems to stay pretty constant, and in that case my recommendation would be the same as before: Don't upgrade to Windows 11 yet. That is very, very unlikely, however, and you might actually see some higher performance out of your rig.įor mid-range PC gamers… well, nothing seems to change. Though, somewhat inevitably, you have more to lose if some catastrophic, unforeseen bug totals your machine. If you're sporting a monster of a gaming PC, then I'd probably say you have more reason than most to actually upgrade your rig. It's certainly interesting that the lower spec machine seems to be being bottlenecked, while the top rig is seemingly being given license to spread its performance wings.Ĭompared with what looks like a more balanced setup in the current Windows 10 build, it looks like if you're sitting on an entry level gaming PC then I'd definitely suggest keeping your distance from a Windows 11 upgrade just yet. It's possible that Windows 11 might actually be starting to make high-performance RAM and/or high core-count processors worthwhile for gaming. As our partner for these detailed performance analyses, MSI provided the hardware we needed to test Windows 11 on different PC gaming hardware.
