Richard & AliceAll GPUs › GTX 1660 Super

Can I run Richard & Alice on GTX 1660 Super?

SMOOTH ~158 FPS at 1080p High settings

GTX 1660 Super runs Richard & Alice at approximately ~158 FPS at 1080p High settings — verdict: SMOOTH. At 1440p: ~150 FPS (SMOOTH). At 4K: ~130 FPS (SMOOTH).

GTX 1660 Super — FPS at High settings
1080p
158 FPS SMOOTH
1440p
150 FPS SMOOTH
4K
130 FPS SMOOTH
SMOOTH
~158 FPS

The GTX 1660 Super delivers ~158 FPS in Richard & Alice at 1080P High settings — exceeding the 60 FPS smooth-play threshold by 98 FPS. This GPU is a strong match for high-refresh-rate monitors on this title. No upgrade needed.

Performance Optimizer

Live Simulation
1080p
158
FPS
134 1% low
SMOOTH
1440p
150
FPS
128 1% low
SMOOTH
4K
130
FPS
111 1% low
SMOOTH
GTX 1660 Super Specs
VRAM 6 GB
Generation 2019
Upscaling FSR 2
Frame Gen Not supported
Perf tier
~ Estimated FPS calibrated via Gemini AI. Feature support may vary — unverified options are hidden.
Upscaling / AI
Upscaling not supported in this title
Ray Tracing
No RT on this GPU
Frame Gen
Not supported on this GPU
CPU Tier
GPU
CPU

Frequently asked questions — GTX 1660 Super & Richard & Alice

Can I run Richard & Alice on GTX 1660 Super?

Yes. The GTX 1660 Super delivers approximately 158 FPS in Richard & Alice at 1080p High settings. This exceeds the 60 FPS smooth-play threshold — gameplay is fluid without any adjustments needed.

What FPS does GTX 1660 Super get in Richard & Alice at 1440p?

The GTX 1660 Super averages approximately 150 FPS in Richard & Alice at 1440p High settings — verdict: SMOOTH. Excellent result for high-refresh-rate 1440p monitors.

Can GTX 1660 Super run Richard & Alice at 4K?

The GTX 1660 Super averages approximately 130 FPS in Richard & Alice at 4K High settings — verdict: SMOOTH. 4K gaming is fully viable on this GPU for this title.

About Richard & Alice

Richard & Alice is a riveting mystery story about family, desperation and the weather – all set to the beat of an indie adventure game.

View all deals for Richard & Alice →
Was this FPS estimate accurate for you?