Secret of Mana Official PC System Requirements

Secret of Mana releases next week and Square Enix revealed the game’s official PC system requirements via its Steam store page. According to the specs, PC gamers will need at least an a 64-bit operating system with an Intel Core i3 at 2.4GHz, 4GB of RAM, and an NVIDIA GeForce GT730 or an AMD Radeon R7 240 in order to play it at 1280×720.

For 1920×1080, Square Enix recommends an Intel Core i5 at 2.00GHz with 4GB of RAM and an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 750 or an AMD Radeon R7 260X. The game will also require 11GB of free hard-disk space.

What’s also interesting here is that neither the game’s Steam store page nor its EULA lists Denuvo. As such, we don’t know whether the publisher will be using this controversial anti-tamper tech in its latest title. For reference, Square Enix listed Denuvo for Final Fantasy XII The Zodiac Age prior to the game’s release.

But anyway, below you can find the full PC specs for Secret of Mana.

Secret of Mana PC Requirements

MINIMUM:

    • OS: Windows 7 / 8.1 / 10 (64-bit)
    • Processor: INTEL Core i3 2.4GHz
    • Memory: 4 GB RAM
    • Graphics: GeForce GT730 / RADEON R7 240
    • DirectX: Version 11
    • Storage: 11 GB available space
    • Additional Notes: Resolution: 1280×720

RECOMMENDED:

    • OS: Windows 7 / 8.1 / 10 (64-bit)
    • Processor: INTEL Core i5 2.00GHz
    • Memory: 4 GB RAM
    • Graphics: GeForce GTX 750 / RADEON R7 260X
    • DirectX: Version 11
    • Storage: 11 GB available space
    • Additional Notes: Resolution: 1920×1080

8 thoughts on “Secret of Mana Official PC System Requirements”

  1. Requirements seem LIGHT on the PC/hardware…

    I’m guessing even an iGPU might be able to run this game on modest settings, provided the game has full support for integrated graphics as well…
    .

  2. So, Square Enix cut denuvo on new games but “protect” remastered versions of 10 year old games. Flawless logic imho.

    1. At this point the publisher just needs to go back to all their PC games and ax Denuvo. This DRM method has long outlived any “usefulness” it may have had.

      1. World of Final Fantasy doesn’t have Denuvo, and that’s also a brand-new game. Square Enix is all over the place with it’s use of DRM.

    2. Maybe this is surprise Denuvo, the kind that doesn’t show up in the EULA. That’s already happened a bunch of times.

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