GTX 1050 Ti runs BOT.vinnik Chess: Early USSR Championships at approximately ~115 FPS at 1080p High settings — verdict: SMOOTH. At 1440p: ~108 FPS (SMOOTH). At 4K: ~93 FPS (SMOOTH).
The GTX 1050 Ti averages ~115 FPS in BOT.vinnik Chess: Early USSR Championships at 1080P High settings, comfortably above the 60 FPS smooth-play threshold. Frame pacing is stable at this resolution. No GPU upgrade required.
Performance Optimizer
Live SimulationFrequently asked questions — GTX 1050 Ti & BOT.vinnik Chess: Early USSR Championships
Can I run BOT.vinnik Chess: Early USSR Championships on GTX 1050 Ti?
Yes. The GTX 1050 Ti delivers approximately 115 FPS in BOT.vinnik Chess: Early USSR Championships at 1080p High settings. This exceeds the 60 FPS smooth-play threshold — gameplay is fluid without any adjustments needed.
What FPS does GTX 1050 Ti get in BOT.vinnik Chess: Early USSR Championships at 1440p?
The GTX 1050 Ti averages approximately 108 FPS in BOT.vinnik Chess: Early USSR Championships at 1440p High settings — verdict: SMOOTH. Excellent result for high-refresh-rate 1440p monitors.
Can GTX 1050 Ti run BOT.vinnik Chess: Early USSR Championships at 4K?
The GTX 1050 Ti averages approximately 93 FPS in BOT.vinnik Chess: Early USSR Championships at 4K High settings — verdict: SMOOTH. 4K gaming is fully viable on this GPU for this title.
About BOT.vinnik Chess: Early USSR Championships
All this current chess hype is producing too many know-it-alls. It's time to teach you kids real chess from my fellow masters. Enroll now and you might learn a thing or two.
View all deals for BOT.vinnik Chess: Early USSR Championships →