Ahead of Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 2’s full release on October 28th, I’ve been using its campaign early access to get familiar with its inner PC workings. As familiar as one can get, anyway, with a monster list of 30-plus display and graphics settings, not even counting all the granular DLSS and FSR options for compatible graphics cards.

After Lord-knows-how-many breachings and clearings of the same damn oil rig, I believe I’ve cracked these options and found the best settings combination to balance nu-MW2’s sharp visuals with smooth, steady performance. The latter can be a big ask of older, weaker PC hardware, despite some innocuous system requirements, but with the right tweaks it’s easy to get at least a solid 60fps on most modern GPUs and CPUs.

If you want to skip straight to my recommended settings guide, click those words you just read. Otherwise, read on for a closer look at MW2’s official system specs, and more on how it actually runs on PC.



Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 system requirements and PC performance

These spec lists suggest MW2 won’t ask much of your rig, except for a rather SSD-hogging 125GB storage space requirement (the campaign, which you can play now if you’ve preordered, is a much more reasonable 34.6GB by itself). Target resolutions and quality settings aren’t given for these but the Recommended list suggests it’s for smooth 1080p.

Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 minimum system requirements

  • GPU: Nvidia GeForce GTX 960 / AMD Radeon RX 470
  • CPU: Intel Core i3-6100 / Intel Core i5-2500K / AMD Ryzen 3 1200
  • RAM: 8GB
  • OS: Windows 10 64-bit
  • Storage: 125GB available space
  • DirectX: DX12
  • GPU: Nvidia GeForce GTX 1060 / AMD Radeon RX 580
  • CPU: Intel Core i5-6600K / Intel Core i7-4770 / AMD Ryzen 5 1400
  • RAM: 12GB
  • OS: Windows 10 64-bit / Windows 11 64-bit
  • Storage: 125GB available space
  • DirectX: DX12

I had a 6GB GTX 1060 lying around, so began testing with it inside my Intel Core i5-11600-based test PC with 16GB of RAM. For benchmarking, I settled on the Dark Water mission roughly halfway into the campaign – it’s one of, if not the toughest sections in the game on PC performance, so anything that can run well here will run well anywhere. Hopefully that will also go for the multiplayer and co-op Spec Ops modes, though I’ll check back once they’re accessible.

In spite of my CPU and RAM greatly exceeding the recommended requirements, however, the GTX 1060 couldn’t quite keep up with the best-looking settings at 1080p. The highest quality preset, Extreme, averaged 31fps – only just playable, and nowhere near Call of Duty’s optimal slickness. The Ultra preset looked and ran about the same, averaging 33fps, so it took dropping down yet another step – Balanced – to get a decently smooth 52fps.

I’d recommend avoiding the Basic and Minimum presets if you can – they certainly ran better on the GTX 1060, averaging 63fps and 109fps respectively, but look so much worse that they should only be called upon by the weakest, most decrepit GPUs. And the Minimum preset’s gains were largely down to it cutting render resolution from 1920×1080 to 960×540 – that’s lower than on the Steam Deck‘s screen, and it shows. You can crank this back up to your monitor’s native resolution manually, but setting it back to 1080p cut average performance back down to 65fps, which was indistinguishable from Basic.

(Speaking of the Steam Deck, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 is unfortunately only playable on Valve’s handheld if you’re using Windows on it. The game’s Richochet anti-cheat is incompatible with the default, Linux-based SteamOS, so will prevent MW2 from launching even if you’re only trying to play singleplayer.)

On the bright side, it’s not like you need an RTX 4090 for good framerates, The GTX 1060’s bigger brother, the GTX 1070, is far better equipped for MW2 at 1080p: I got a mostly fine 45fps out of the Extreme preset and 73fps on Balanced. The latter also produced 51fps at native 1440p, though I highly recommended you avail yourself of one of the many upscaling options at this resolution and above. I originally played through the campaign at 4K using an RTX 2080 Ti , and usually got between 60fps and 70fps with Nvidia DLSS on its Balanced mode. There’s more on these in the best settings section, but in short, DLSS is 100% worth using if your card supports it, and Intel XeSS is a fine GPU-agnostic alternative.

There were no recurring technical or performance problem during my campaign playthrough, nor my subsequent benchmarking. When MW2 does break, though, it breaks spectacularly, even if it’s just a one-off. Here’s how a usually picturesque Amsterdam scene once loaded in for me:


Heavily glitched-out graphics in the second Amsterdam mission of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2.
Like a fabulous flashbang.

And forgive the lack of screenshots, but I also got a bizarre bug where a newly-spawned squad of armoured enemies appeared completely invisible – except for the visors on their helmets, bobbing nonchalantly through the air. Even more strangely, their textures popped back into view after I snuck past them and turned around, as if their corporeality was dependent on viewing angle? Bizarre.

These are nothing a patch can’t fix (or, in the case of the luminescent Netherlands capital, a quick restart). However, RPS vid bud Liam has just informed me that MW2 stuttered badly for him when it was installed on his hard drive, before running normally after switching the install to an SSD. This sounds an awful lot like a stuttering issue that befell 2019’s Modern Warfare, so while I haven’t experienced this myself, you may want to stick to solid state storage if you have the room.



Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 protagonist Soap is interrogated (in first-person) by a cartel sicaria.

Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 best settings guide

Judging from the performance gap between MW2’s Balanced and Ultra presets, you could just whack on the former and call it a day. Except on closer inspection, Balanced is mainly a combination of lower-end settings, resulting in some ugly spots – in the Amsterdam gallery above, see how the Balanced preset adds a fuzzy, pixelated effect on the car and water to the far left, not to mention visibly lower-quality shadows and less effective anti-aliasing.

I think we can do better, which means making individual adjustments to MW2’s graphics settings. These are incredibly detailed – I count over 40 separate options, including all the upscalers – but the kicker is that only a few of these have a meaningful impact on FPS performance. In other words, presets like Balanced and especially Basic are making cuts to visual quality that don’t actually help MW2 run much faster.

Normally at this point, I’d run through how every single setting helps or hurts framerates, but since so many of them don’t do either, let’s approach this part differently. First, I’ll simply list all the settings that you can leave on High or Ultra, as lowering them will have only negible FPS impact. Then, I’ll walk through the settings you should lower, along with how doing so improved performance on the GTX 1070 at 1080p. Sound good?

‘Kay, first here are the settings to leave at their Extreme preset levels. Individually, lowering these either didn’t affect the GTX 1070’s performance at all, or actually made things worse by reducing how deep MW2 can tap into your PC’s resources.

  • Anti-Aliasing (Filmic SMAA T2X)
  • Anti-Aliasing Quality
  • Video Memory Scale
  • Texture Resolution
  • Texture Filter Anisotropic
  • Nearby Level of Detail
  • Distant Level of Detail
  • Tessellation
  • Terrain Memory
  • On-demand Texture Streaming
  • Streaming Quality
  • Deferred Physics Quality
  • Water Caustics (note: this effect seems to be a form of real-time ray tracing, as it wasn’t available on the GTX 1070. I instead tested it on and off using an RTX 3070, and it didn’t affect overall performance either way.)
  • Screen Space Shadows
  • Cache Spot Shadows
  • Spot Cache
  • Cache Sun Shadows
  • Particle Lighting
  • Ambient Occlusion
  • Screen Space Reflections
  • Weather Grid Volumes
  • Nvidia Reflex Low Latency
  • Depth of Field
  • World Motion Blur
  • Weapon Motion Blur
  • Film Grain

Aren’t you glad you didn’t just have to read 28 different variations on “I set this to Low and still got 45fps?” More importantly, here are the ones you should try lowering: the best settings, you might say. With these, and keeping all those settings above at their Extreme defaults, the GTX 1070 averaged 61fps at 1080p – which isn’t as fast as on Balanced, but produces a generally finer-looking picture. And that’s still a 36% improvement on using the Extreme preset as-is.

  • Clutter Draw Distance: Short
  • Particle Quality: Low
  • Particle Quality Level: Normal
  • Bullet Impact & Sprays: Off
  • Shader Quality: Medium
  • Volumetric Quality: Medium
  • Shadow Map Resolution: Low
  • Spot Shadow Quality: Medium

Remember to restart the game after applying these, so the change in shader quality can take effect. All other settings you can change freely without needing a restart.

That will hopefully sort you for 1080p, but if you’re playing at 1440p or 4K, consider throwing in an upscaler as well. MW2 supports several, including Intel’s shiny new XeSS upscaler, and DLSS, which sadly doesn’t work on the GTX 1070. I therefore swapped in my RTX 3070 for testing these, again using the Extreme preset as a baseline and upping the native resolution to 1440p. Here’s how they performed:

  • Intel XeSS: This looks remarkably like native resolution for a first attempt, even about on par with DLSS. On its Quality setting, it also improved RTX 3070 performance from 70fps (at native 1440p) to 90fps; that isn’t as fast as DLSS’s equivalent Balanced setting, but since it matches pace with FSR and looks better, XeSS is the upscaler to use if you don’t have an RTX graphics card.
  • Nvidia DLSS: A 99fps average makes this the best performer of the bunch, at least on an RTX 3070, and its integrated anti-aliasing is an improvement on the game’s own. As such, it’s an easy pick for anyone with an RTX GPU, though by default it comes with an overly imposing sharpening filter applied. Take an extra two seconds to turn this down, all the way to 0 if you wish, and DLSS will look as good as native res.
  • Nvidia Image Scaling: This is meant to be a cheap and cheerful DLSS alternative that works on any graphics card, including AMD’s. It’s effective too, averaging 95fps, though XeSS is much sharper. I’d use that and give up the extra 5fps any day.
  • AMD FSR 1.0: It’s a shame this isn’t the superior FSR 2.0 or 2.1. FSR 1.0 adds a decent performance boost in Balanced mode, matching XeSS’ 90fps to the frame, but Intel’s upscaler looks less blurry.
  • FidelityFX CAS: This, uh, isn’t actually an upscaler. It’s a sharpening filter that for some reason is in the upscalers section of MW2’s settings, and while it doesn’t look bad, it actually cut average performance from 70fps to 65fps. I wouldn’t bother with it.

That’s a clear, if shared win for DLSS and XeSS, so add one of those to the mix if you’re playing at high resolutions.

Lastly, I know I said you can ignore settings like Depth of Field, Motion Blur and Film Grain if you’re solely concerned with performance, but by all means turn these off if they’re not to your tastes. Modern Warfare 2’s DoF effect is one of the most aggressive I’ve ever seen in a game, with some of the more ‘cinematic’ scenes lurching between focal lengths to a distracting degree.


Activision Blizzard, the company behind recent and upcoming titles including Diablo Immortal and Overwatch 2, are currently the subject of a number of legal actions and further accusations related to allegations of sexual harrassment, workplace discrimination, and poor working conditions at the company. Furthermore, New York pension funds are seeking access to the company’s records in pursuit of CEO Bobby Kotick following Microsoft’s $68.7 billion buy-out of Activision Blizzard. Despite this, Kotick has been re-elected to the company’s board of directors for another year, and an internally-conducted investigation concluded that there was “no evidence” of reported harassment being tolerated within the company. The methods and findings of this investigation have been heavily disputed.

Rock Paper Shotgun continue to write about Activision Blizzard games as part of our commitment to reporting on key actors within the games industry, holding companies to account, and covering games that are of interest to our readers. However, we are also committed to providing you with up-to-date information on the situation at Activision Blizzard, with the aim of allowing you to make an informed decision about the games you choose to play. The latest news can always be found under our Activision Blizzard tag.

James Archer

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