Best gaming PC for Tooth and Tail (2026)
Choose a PC tier based on the resolution and frame rate you want for Tooth and Tail. We cover four tiers below.
What Tooth and Tail actually demands from your PC
Steam's recommended spec for Tooth and Tail is unspecified with —GB RAM and a mid-range CPU. That spec was written for the Pocketwatch Games team's internal "minimum acceptable" target, not for a buyer in 2026 planning to keep this PC for the next four years.
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 cheapest PC that can run Tooth and Tail?
- Most modern entry-level gaming PCs (around £700–£800) will run Tooth and Tail at 1080p.
- Is Tooth and Tail CPU-heavy or GPU-heavy?
- Tooth and Tail 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 Tooth and Tail?
- Tooth and Tail does not require ray tracing. Any current-generation GPU will deliver the intended visual experience.
- How much RAM do I need?
- For Tooth and Tail, 32GB is the sensible answer in 2026. 16GB still works for the budget tier but limits future-proofing.