

Resolution and Vsync aside (and Windowed/Fullscreen/Borderless, which is pleasant) you have Depth of Field, Blur, Bloom, and Anti-Aliasing. So, to put it mildly, they’re very limited. Vsync locks it to a constant 60 FPS, and running it uncapped has most of the game at over 200 FPS… sort of. Incredibly low specs, all told, so it’s of little surprise that Catherine Classic runs flawlessly. Graphics: DirectX10 compliant card with 1 GB VRAM Dreamlike SpecsĬPU: Intel Core i3 (2.9 GHz) or AMD equivalent

As it turns out, those claims are somewhat misleading.


While the PC version isn’t the new-fangled Catherine: Full-Body coming to the PS4 later this year, it does have 4K resolution, Japanese voice-overs, and an uncapped framerate. While Catherine on PC isn’t too much of a shock given all of the hints over the past few weeks, the fact that it was officially announced at the exact same time as its launch was a little bit more startling. At night, Vincent’s desperation results in terrifying nightmares in which he must climb his way up to survival, with various obstacles hindering his path.Surprise surprise: Catherine Classic is out on PC today. The story can take many paths: make the wrong choice and you could end up dead. The story follows Vincent Brooks, a man who is beset by supernatural nightmares while torn between his feelings for longtime girlfriend Katherine and the similarly-named beauty Catherine. Today Sega have announced that Catherine Classic is available now for PC as a digital download for $29.99 (AUD) on Steam.Ĭatherine Classic features the original game and puzzles you loved but it has now been fully optimised to run on PCĬatherine is a puzzle platformer game developed by Atlus originally released for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 in 2011.
