PC Games Guide

← ​The Ninja Saviors: Return of the Warriors

Best gaming PC for ​The Ninja Saviors: Return of the Warriors (2026)

Choose a PC tier based on the resolution and frame rate you want for ​The Ninja Saviors: Return of the Warriors. We cover four tiers below.

What ​The Ninja Saviors: Return of the Warriors actually demands from your PC

​The Ninja Saviors: Return of the Warriors isn't sold on Steam, so there's no Steam-published requirements table to quote. The picks above are based on real-world performance and comparison with similar titles rather than a publisher spec sheet.

GPU-bound title: Framerate scales directly with GPU power. If you have a fixed budget, prioritise the graphics card and accept a mid-range CPU.

What you can skip vs what matters

  • Worth spending on: GPU first, then a fast NVMe SSD (most modern games benefit from sub-3000MB/s sustained reads), then RAM at the tier amount.
  • Worth skipping at this budget: RGB lighting, exotic cooling, brand-name PSUs above 850W (unless you're building enthusiast tier), and motherboards with more than 4 M.2 slots.
  • Don't compromise on: The PSU. A reliable 750W gold-rated unit will outlast two GPU upgrades.

Frequently asked questions

What's the minimum gaming PC for ​The Ninja Saviors: Return of the Warriors?
A modern entry-level gaming PC with a current-generation midrange GPU will run ​The Ninja Saviors: Return of the Warriors at 1080p high settings.
Is ​The Ninja Saviors: Return of the Warriors CPU-heavy or GPU-heavy?
​The Ninja Saviors: Return of the Warriors is primarily GPU-bound. Prioritise the graphics card; a mid-range CPU like the Ryzen 5 7600 will keep up at 1080p/60.
Do I need ray tracing for ​The Ninja Saviors: Return of the Warriors?
​The Ninja Saviors: Return of the Warriors does not require ray tracing. Any current-generation GPU will deliver the intended visual experience.
How much RAM do I need?
For ​The Ninja Saviors: Return of the Warriors, 32GB is the sensible answer in 2026. 16GB still works for the budget tier but limits future-proofing.