System requirement lists don’t usually make me giddy, but when a highly anticipated sequel like Little Nightmares 3 reveals its PC specs, it’s time to pay attention. Will your rig slip through the cracks of the nightmare or demand a wallet sacrifice? Let’s break it down.
Surprisingly, Little Nightmares 3 leans on graphics cards from 2017—think NVIDIA GTX 1060 or AMD RX 580—for minimum playability. That means no rush for a brand-new GPU unless you’ve been offline for half a decade. On the CPU side, an Intel Skylake-era chip (circa 2015) or equivalent AMD processor and 8 GB of RAM clear the bar. In short: if your machine isn’t a fossil, you’re probably fine.
The install hovers around 20–30 GB, a drop in the bucket compared to many AAA titles. While a mechanical hard drive technically works, modern horror thrives on quick load times, so an SSD is strongly advised to avoid pacing through corridors at a snail’s pace.
Here’s the twist: Little Nightmares 3 requires Windows 11. That’s not about squeezing extra frames—it’s Microsoft’s push for TPM 2.0 (a security module) and UEFI Secure Boot. Many motherboards made before 2017 lack these features by default, even if you could otherwise run the game. Gamers on Windows 10 for stability or privacy reasons may find themselves locked out unless they upgrade or jump through unofficial hoops, which carry their own headaches.
For those after higher resolutions or richer effects, the recommended spec list calls for an NVIDIA RTX 2080 or AMD RX 6800 GPU, alongside an Intel Core i5-8400 or AMD Ryzen 5 1600 and 12 GB of RAM. That’s a reasonable bump for 1440p or 4K settings without demanding the top-tier 16 GB+ setups some recent games ask for.
Feature | Specification |
---|---|
Publisher | Bandai Namco Entertainment |
Release Date | October 2025 |
Genres | Horror, Puzzle-Platformer |
Platforms | PC, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X|S |
If you’ve kept your PC moderately up-to-date, you’ll enjoy spooky visuals without splurging on new hardware. But require Windows 11 and its security mandates may strand users on perfectly capable Windows 10 systems. Community forums are already buzzing with debates over potential workarounds and whether the developer will consider a Windows 10 patch in response to player feedback.
Bottom line: Little Nightmares 3 is a breath of fresh (and chilling) air for gamers with aging graphics cards, but the Windows 11 mandate is the real monster under the bed. Let’s hope Bandai Namco keeps an ear on community feedback and—if enough players speak up—considers a path for Windows 10 users to join the nightmare.
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