16 best 4K games: the must-play titles to punish your PC


Best 4K games

Tomb Raider

Update: He’s mean, a bit green and carries a BFG in his back pocket. That’s right: our latest entry is Doom in at number 16.

The 4K revolution has arrived on PC, and if your eyes haven’t yet dined at the table of Ultra HD gaming, we’ve tracked down the best 4K games sure to give them a visual feast.

Packing four times as many pixels as common 1080p displays, 3,840 x 2,160 pixel-resolution “4K” monitors can make newer games breathtakingly immersive, and those extra pixels can even help pump life back into older titles using high-resolution texture packs and mods.

Of course, in addition to a 4K monitor, you’ll need a beefy gaming rig with a powerful graphics card (or three) to do them justice – because even gorgeous visuals soon wear thin if your frame rate matches your shoe size.

Whether you’ve already made the leap or are about to, click on to view our best 4K games screenshot gallery. We’ll be adding to it as we go along, so drop us a comment below if you’d like to see a particular game make the grade.

1. The Witcher 3

Best 4K games

While console gamers are still arguing over whether the latest Witcher 3 patch dialled down the game’s graphics, members of the PC elite have been firing up CD Projekt’s epic third-person adventure in a blaze of 4K glory.

Rendered natively, The Witcher 3’s highly-detailed environments look nothing short of incredible in 4K – from Novigrad’s sprawling architecture to its red sunlit fields, not to mention its spiny Echinops, grotesque Bloedzuigers and veiny Cemetaurs. Having your face ripped off has never looked so beautiful.

Nitpickers may point out that Wild Hunt’s backgrounds and foliage don’t match up to what was shown in pre-release promo shots, something that’s increasingly becoming par for the course for PC gamers, but even so it’s still one of the best-looking games out there.

2. DiRT: Showdown

Best 4K games

It may be creaking a bit in the tyres, but DiRT Showdown is still one of the best-looking arcade racers out there and its Destruction Derby-style thrills are even more heart-pumping on a 4K monitor. While fans of Codemasters’ racing series may point to DiRT 3 as the all-round meatier title, Showdown’s over-the-top approach – from the flame jets that light up indoor tracks to its spectacular chassis-contorting crashes and colorful art style – make it the more visually appealing title.

3. Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare

Best 4K games

The latest entry into the Call Of Duty franchise, Advanced Warfare aims to banish all memory of the muddy textures that plagued its scarily ugly predecessor, Ghosts. After three years in development it appears to have succeeded: Warfare’s high-octane firefights are nothing short of stunning in 4K thanks to its sharp visuals, Exo-llent (sorry) character models and highly detailed weapons. Another nice effect of playing in 4K is having an eye-poppingly crisp HUD, which is the closest you’ll get to wearing an Exo Suit (short of strapping on an Oculus Rift, anyway).

4. Dishonored

Best 4K games

Nominated for several ‘Best Graphics’ and ‘Best Art Style’ industry awards upon release, Dishonored wasn’t exactly a bad-looking game in 2012. Crank up the pixels, however, and Dunwall’s retro-future-industrial aesthetic is elevated to a whole new level of dystopian beauty.

Taking time to admire its convincing water effects, Orwellian-era buildings like the Hound Pits Pub, and bizarre Pandyssian wildlife, ogling Dishonored’s visuals in 4K can prove a welcome distraction to clearing your name of murder.

5. Dying Light

Dying Light

A punishing title that demands serious GPU power for the best experience (especially if you want to ramp up the draw distance), Dying Light in 4K has you smelling the breath of the Zombie hordes while watching blood ooze from their rotten, bashed-in craniums.

The level of detail is phenomenal – from the game’s leafy suburbs to its blood-splattered weapons and NPCs’ facial expressions. Standing on a roof watching flames lick the hood of a burning car while plotting your escape from the army of undead never has never felt so real.

6. BioShock Infinite

Best 4K games

BioShock Infinite came out in 2013 and wasn’t designed for 4K monitors, but you wouldn’t know it. Irrational Games’ third shooter in the BioShock series, Infinite looks still jaw-dropping in Ultra HD thanks to its highly-detailed textures, illuminating lighting effects and Columbia’s neoclassical-styled architecture.

When not stopping to admire its buildings, you’ll likely be checking out Booker’s glistening weaponry or staring into the vacant eyes of Monument Island’s many enemies. Infinite’s high-speed firefights up in the Sky-Lines are particularly engaging in 4K, not to mention its four weird and wonderful boss fights.

7. Metro: Last Light Redux

Metro: Last Light

While the Redux version of Metro: Last Light features slightly tweaked graphics compared to the original (it goes in slightly heavier on smoke and lighting effects), both games feature some of the best visuals around with the resolution dialled up to 4K. Skulking from shadow to shadow in Last Light’s post-apocalyptic Russia in a bid to avoid the Vichukha is even more tense in Ultra HD, and if you’ve got sufficient graphical grunt, its weapon and particle effects give firefights an extra dose of pretty.

8. Tomb Raider

Tomb Raider

If you’re waiting patiently to ogle Rise of the Tomb Raider’s gorgeous visuals, maxing out the current game in the series isn’t a bad way to pass the time. Cranking up the resolution along with texture, anti-aliasing and high precision settings unlocks a ton of hidden detail in Tomb Raider, which boasts atmospheric lighting, dancing shadows and hair textures that wouldn’t be out of place in a shampoo commercial. (Not when Lara’s caked in mud, mind.) Huge draw distances and polygon-smoothing tessellation effects all help the fictional island of Yamatai shine in 4K.

9. Assetto Corsa

Side view

Forget trying to drive well during your first few Assetto Corsa races – it just won’t happen. The driving simulator’s graphics are so tasty in 4K/Ultra that you’ll be too busy ogling the sun’s reflection on your car’s bonnet from five different camera angles. The racing action looks best in the game’s first-person in-car view. If you’re not fixated on the creases in the driver’s gloves, you’ll be mentally running your fingers over the rubber-coated dashboard’s dimples and smelling the freshly-cut grass outside. If you’re pining for a realistic racer to show off your new 4K monitor, forget Project Cars – Assetto Corsa is the real deal.

More screenshots (click to enlarge)

Assetto Corsa

Asseto Corsa

Assetto Corsa

Assetto Corsa

10. Star Wars: Battlefront

Battelfront

Whether you agree that Star Wars: Battlefront is a war simulator with no heart, or not, it’s undeniable that EA’s online shooter is a visual feast fit for a wookie. From the forest of Endor’s leafy vegetation to Hoth’s snow-capped mountains and Tatooine’s sunlit rock faces, Star Wars has never looked so good.

More screenshots (click to enlarge)

Battlefront

Battlefront

Battlefront

Battlefront

Battlefront

Battlefront

11. Fifa 16

FIFA 16

Ever wanted to peer up Gareth Bale’s nostrils rendered in pixel-perfect 4K? Now’s your chance, you oddball. Graphics haven’t traditionally been Fifa’s strongest suit, which means that EA’s latest footy sim particularly benefits from the extra pixels afforded by Ultra HD. While we still get the feeling that EA could make the beautiful game even more beautiful (in the graphics, rather than free-following-attacking-football sense), Fifa 16 is easily the best-looking installment in the series to date.

More screenshots (click to enlarge)

Gareth Bale

FIFA 16

FIFA 16

FIFA 16

FIFA 16

FIFA 16

12. Fallout 4

Fallout 4

The most anticipated game of the year isn’t the prettiest out of the box, which is forgivable given Fallout 4’s sheer size and scope. Still, even without loading up on of the many beautifying mods out there – such as the Wasteland graphics mod and the Texture Optimization Project – Fallout 4 is still a sight to behold. Cranking up the resolution and notching up the settings to Ultra results in some particularly mesmerizing outdoor environments as the sun’s rays flicker through the trees.

More screenshots (click to enlarge)

Fallout 4

Fallout 4

Fallout 4

Fallout 4

Fallout 4

Fallout 4

Fallout 4

Fallout 4

Fallout 4

Fallout 4

13. Mortal Kombat X

Best 4K games

The best-looking brawler around bar none, Mortal Kombat X’s gore-some visuals make you wince at every ribcage-snapping, skull-crushing-eye gouging move. MKX gives you a wide ranging, but not extensive selection of tweakable graphics settings – ranging from anti-aliasing, anisotropic filtering, shadow quality and texture quality to bloom, depth of field, motion blur, ambient occlusion and particle density. You’ll need a high-end graphics card to whack everything up to 11.

More screenshots (click to enlarge)

Best 4K games - Mortal Kombat X

Best 4K games - Mortal Kombat X

Best 4K games - Mortal Kombat X

Best 4K games - Mortal Kombat X

Best 4K games - Mortal Kombat X

Best 4K games - Mortal Kombat X

Best 4K games - Mortal Kombat XA

Best 4K games - Mortal Kombat X

Best 4K games - Mortal Kombat X

Best 4K games - Mortal Kombat X

Best 4K games - Mortal Kombat X

Best 4K games - Mortal Kombat X

Best 4K games - Mortal Kombat X

Best 4K games - Mortal Kombat X

14. Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Few games look as photorealistic as Lara’s latest outing. Rise of the Tomb Raider was the first game to utilize Nvidia’s Voxel Accelerated Ambient Occlusion (VXAO) technique, which adds depth and realism to scenes by calculating shadows using a scene’s surrounding geometry, rather than what’s visible to the camera. And then there’s physically-based rendering, reactive water and more hair swishing than a shampoo advert. Simply put, Rise of the Tomb Raider had the works and shines in 4K. From the Uncharted-esque opening sequence that takes place atop a snow-capped mountain to the sunlit tombs that follow, the attention to detail has you panning the camera to soak up the surroundings as often as you’re actually – you know – raiding tombs and stuff.

More screenshots (click to enlarge)

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

Rise of the Tomb Raider

15. Overwatch

Overwatch

Standing still to appreciate a game’s architecture in, say, Rise of Tomb Raider is fine. In Blizzard’s fast-paced shooter Overwatch, however, it’s not such a good idea if you want to avoid adding to your growing death tally. The team-based strategy FPS is organized chaos and beautiful to boot – especially if you own a gaming PC with more graphics muscle than Reinhardt’s right arm. If you’re playing in 4K, remember to flick the Resolution Scale setting to 100% to render Blizzard’s new game engine in all its glory.

More screenshots (click to enlarge)

Overwatch

Overwatch

Overwatch

Overwatch

Overwatch

Overwatch

Overwatch

Overwatch

Overwatch

Overwatch

Overwatch

Overwatch

Overwatch

Overwatch

Overwatch

Overwatch

16. Doom

Doom

Few games have managed to set pulses racing like Doom has in 2016. Whether you’re double-jumping across a room with Quad Damage and Haste power-ups coursing through your veins, spamming a Baron of Hell with rockets or legging it from a troublesome pair of Pinkies, Doom is one breathtaking set-piece after another.

Whack up the quality settings to Ultra and the resolution to 4K and you’ll see the best of the game’s dynamic lighting and soft shadows, and its terrifically-animated demon enemies are rendered in gruesome detail. Your PC might even stand a chance of running it at fluid frame rates thanks to the recent Vulcan API patch, which was used for the screenshots below.

More screenshots (click to enlarge)

Doom

Doom

Doom

Doom

Doom

Doom

Doom

Doom

Doom

Source: techradar.com

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25 Comments
  1. Reply Mr. Dell Hahn MD July 19, 2016 at 8:22 pm

    It's not about rules of grammar. It's about a spell checker being in English, and as such correcting a what it deemed a misspelt word.

  2. Reply Camden Lindgren July 19, 2016 at 8:27 pm

    I'm running a Titan X, which obviously isn't as good as 2 980 Ti in SLI, but it does a pretty good job as well. I also have 32 GB of RAM, and an i7 4960x. Without overclocking anything, I can get 30-40fps on Dying Light. That's with high and ultra setting and AA on. Overclocking it will probably get 40-50 which isn't too bad. I haven't tried GTA 5 yet, but I'm sure it will have similar results. I'm playing the new Mad Max game and I'm nailing 60fps without overclocking. That game looks quite amazing in 4k as well. As long as I can get 30+ with the highest settings, while in 4k, I'm fine with that. Most of my games can get 60 or close.

  3. Reply Noemi Schroeder July 19, 2016 at 9:35 pm

    Where's GTA V!?
    Where's The Witcher 3?
    Where's Wolfenstein the New Order?
    Where's Elite Dangerous?

    Terrible list of relatively old/obscure games…

    Also, I ask, wasn't the title "9 Games"? I only count 8?

    @ Kane Fulton – Go home you are drunk…

  4. Reply Mrs. Felipa Willms July 19, 2016 at 9:48 pm

    On that note though, the game is based in England, so surely the English spelling should be the one used.

  5. Reply Briana Hauck July 19, 2016 at 10:25 pm

    GTA 5 is stunning in 4K. I have it running 4K (with DSR), nearly all ultra settings and somehow getting a steady 60FPS with 2 x gtx 980 Ti gpu's. It's very well optimised and is perhaps the most impressive open world right now. Witcher 3 is not far behind but getting 60fps is harder. I had to knock the res down a couple of notches from 4K. Locked 60fps is far more important and its pretty hard to tell any differences from the res change when downsampling at such high levels.

  6. Reply Maximillian Harvey July 19, 2016 at 10:35 pm

    Same i have 24 inch 4k and i have shadow of mordor on pc and PS4 and difference is incredible with 4k textures, people who say you need a massive screen or theres hardly any difference are either blind or delusional

  7. Reply Mr. Walton Kulas July 19, 2016 at 10:53 pm

    No I have a 24" 4k monitor that works just fine. Windows 7 scaling may suck but everything is still readable and Windows 10 is released soon anyway. I also get 8k via dynamic super resolution, woot! ^_^

  8. Reply Johan Turner July 20, 2016 at 12:24 am

    Don't believe the hype. Resolution and FPS are only two factors. The third is the graphical bells and whistles. I'm talking about running at Ultra settings. Knocking down to Very High, High or Medium levels will boost FPS.

  9. Reply Tamia Sporer July 20, 2016 at 12:31 am

    Yeah. Imagine a game that maxes out 2 980TIs at 1080p by just added assets and triangles alone.

    That would blow-away any game that maxes 2 980TIs at 4K.

  10. Reply Dr. Allan Zieme DDS July 20, 2016 at 1:24 am

    Wow, this list is pretty bizarre.

    GTA V?
    Shadow of Mordor?
    The Division?
    Assassins Creed Unity & Syndicate?
    Far Cry 3, 4 and Primal?
    Vanishing of Ethan Carter?
    Crysis 3?
    DOOM?
    Batman: Arkham Knight?

    Some notebale omissions that on IQ alone destroy other titles in this list.

    C'mon, Fallout 4?!? Puh-lease!

  11. Reply Fiona Padberg July 20, 2016 at 1:36 am

    It's a proper noun, and thus rules of grammar do not apply. Than in and of itself is a grammar rule. I suggest you learn English before you try and be an English snob.

  12. Reply Margarete Schultz July 20, 2016 at 2:24 am

    Drinking on a Monday? If only. I'm adding one a week, why is why it's now 9. Thanks for the suggestions!

  13. Reply Keith Murray July 20, 2016 at 2:38 am

    Most importantly Crysis 3…

  14. Reply Johnpaul Hills July 20, 2016 at 2:52 am

    I find it odd that the first page of your list uses an image from Alien: Isolation but it isn't on your list. I can tell you Isolation runs fantastic at 4k. Even with sli disabled I can get 60+fps on ultra settings (gtx 980)

  15. Reply Jewel Cummings July 20, 2016 at 3:19 am

    Thing is this are 4k ready graphics cards (or so they sell them as that)

  16. Reply Orrin Schimmel July 20, 2016 at 3:35 am

    Maxwell V2 is made for 1080p and 1440p. They aren't particularly good at running high end titles @ 4k.

  17. Reply Prof. Theodore Osinski Jr. July 20, 2016 at 4:03 am

    So if your mother had called you Fayled Grammer N'azih, we would have to correct you all the time because in english the correct way is "Failed Grammar Nazi"?

  18. Reply Colten Halvorson July 20, 2016 at 4:08 am

    wow that is extremly demanding if you have 2 of the best graphics cards in the world running in SLI and you only get 60fps. I mean this are cards made to play in beyond hd resolution

  19. Reply Yolanda Schneider July 20, 2016 at 4:58 am

    Still it's not "Dishonoured".

  20. Reply Mr. Juwan Crona IV July 20, 2016 at 6:06 am

    Do I have to have a giant monitor to play 4k?

  21. Reply Maria Bode July 20, 2016 at 7:09 am

    Actually, it appears BioShock: Infinite has been added to the list.

  22. Reply Prof. Micah Stokes III July 20, 2016 at 7:45 am

    I have single Titan X with clocks up to 1425 MHz – I got 40FPS @ 4K all maxxed out…

  23. Reply Willy Kiehn July 20, 2016 at 7:55 am

    for lesser folk;-)

  24. Reply Mr. Kay Marks Jr. July 20, 2016 at 8:00 am

    Let them have their Frenchified spelling if they want.

  25. Reply Raymond Dickens July 20, 2016 at 8:11 am

    What about Minecraft in 4K

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