Hardware and Software Specifications

Minimum and recommended hardware specifications and necessary software for developing with Unreal Engine.

Choose your operating system:

Windows

macOS

Linux

Unreal Engine has some specific hardware and software requirements for running the Editor. This page covers these requirements, as well as describing what is installed by the pre-requisites installer included in the Unreal Engine installer.

Recommended Hardware

Operating System

Windows 10 64-bit

Processor

Quad-core Intel or AMD, 2.5 GHz or faster

Memory

8 GB RAM

Video Card/DirectX Version

DirectX 11 or DirectX 12 compatible graphics card

Operating System

macOS 10.14 Mojave

Processor

Quad-core Intel, 2.5 GHz or faster

Memory

8 GB RAM

Video Card

Metal 1.2 Compatible Graphics Card

Operating System

Ubuntu 18.04

Processor

Quad-core Intel or AMD, 2.5 GHz or faster

Memory

32 GB RAM

Video Card

NVIDIA GeForce 960 GTX or higher with latest NVIDIA binary drivers

Video RAM

8 GB or more

Unreal Engine 4.26 removes OpenGL support.

Minimum Software Requirements

Minimum requirements for running the engine or editor are listed below.

Running the Engine

Operating System

Windows 7

DirectX Runtime

DirectX End-User Runtimes (June 2010)

Running the Engine

Operating System

macOS 10.14 Mojave

Running the Engine

Operating System

Any reasonable new Linux distro from CentOS 7.x and up

Linux Kernel Version

kernel 3.x or newer

Additional Dependencies

glibc 2.17 or newer

The requirements for programmers developing with the engine are listed below.

Developing with the Engine

All 'Running the Engine' requirements (automatically installed)

Visual Studio Version

  • Visual Studio 2017 v15.6 or later (recommended)

  • Visual Studio 2019

Visual Studio 2015 is no longer supported in the current release of UE4. If you are developing with the current release of UE4, you need to use either VS 2017 or VS 2019.

iOS App Development

iTunes Version

iTunes 11 or higher

Developing with the Engine

Xcode Version

9.4

Developing with the Engine

Operating System

Ubuntu 18.04

Compiler

clang 6.0.1

Optional

IDE

Visual Studio Code, CLion, QtCreator

Software Installed by the Prerequisite Installer

The Unreal Engine includes a prerequisite installer that installs everything needed to run the editor and engine, including several DirectX components and Visual C++ redistributables. When you install Unreal Engine through the Epic Games Launcher, the Launcher automatically installs these prerequisites for you. However, you may need to run the prerequisite installer yourself if you build Unreal Engine from source, or if you need to prepare a computer with all the Unreal Engine prerequisites for a specific purpose—for example, if you are setting up a fresh computer to act as a Swarm Agent .

You can find the installer, with separate executables for 32-bit and 64-bit Windows, in the Engine/Extras/Redist/en-us folder under your Unreal Engine installation location.

If you use Perforce to get the Unreal Engine source code, you'll also find precompiled binaries in the same Engine/Extras/Redist/en-us folder of the Perforce repository. The source for the installer is under Engine/Source/Programs/PrereqInstaller .

The following table lists the software that is installed by the prerequisite installer.

DirectX Components

Visual C++ Redists

XInput 1.3 (April 2007)

Visual C++ 2010 CRT

X3DAudio 1.7 (February 2010)

Visual C++ 2010 OpenMP library

XAudio 2.7 (June 2010)

Visual C++ 2012 CRT

D3D Compiler 4.3 (June 2010)

Visual C++ 2013 CRT

D3DCSX 4.3 (June 2010)

Visual C++ 2015 CRT

D3DX9 4.3 (June 2010)

Visual Studio 2019 redistributable

D3DX10 4.3 (June 2010)

D3DX11 4.3 (June 2010)

The most important DirectX components from that list are the XInput, X3DAudio, and XAudio dependencies. These aren't included in standard installations of DirectX (and aren't distributed with Windows by default), so they have to be installed manually or distributed with the application.

Graphics Card Drivers

We currently recommend using the latest stable releases from each card manufacturer:

Performance Notes

This list represents a typical system used at Epic, providing a reasonable guideline for developing games with Unreal Engine 4:

  • Windows 10 64-bit

  • 64 GB RAM

  • 256 GB SSD (OS Drive)

  • 2 TB SSD (Data Drive)

  • NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970

  • Xoreax Incredibuild (Dev Tools Package)

  • Six-Core Xeon E5-2643 @ 3.4GHz

If you don't have access to Xoreax Incredibuild (Dev Tools Package), we recommend compiling with a machine having 12 to 16 cores; however, we encourage you to read the Hardware Benchmarks (2017) reference to learn more about compiling with and without XGE.

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