
The Shadowbringers benchmark showed Titania and her arena, for instance. While none of the situations shown in the benchmark are likely to be in the actual game, there are still some minor spoilers and a few things that are probably fairly close to game events. You’ll see new enemy models, new environments, hear new music composed by the frankly amazing Masayoshi Soken, and possibly spot some new skills - but bear in mind these are cutscenes made for effect, so don’t go theorycrafting new combo finishers yet. But for series stalwarts, that may not be the main draw here.īeing a benchmark for Endwalker, everything in these cutscenes are focused on that.

As such, if you haven’t had any issues with Shadowbringers (or even the free Final Fantasy XIV trial) then it’s unlikely your system is going to trip and fall over because of this.

There are no huge graphical updates planned for Endwalker, as far as I’m aware.
Final fantasy xiv endwalker benchmark full#
After those seven minutes, the benchmark will display a score indicating how your system is likely to be able to cope with Endwalker - whether you’ll need lower settings, or if you can whack it up to full and enjoy. The benchmark plays seven minutes of in-engine cutscenes aimed at testing your specs, and judging by the trailer, these will include sweeping panoramas, gigantic battles, and a whole lot of pretty lights. The Final Fantasy XIV: Endwalker benchmark has just been released, allowing prospective world saviors to figure out if their computer can run the forthcoming expansion.
