Quick Answer

For Pacific Drive at 1440p, the practical target is a locked 60 fps profile with native resolution, tuned effects and a small frame cap buffer. A RX 9060 build should start with shadows medium, reflections medium, fog low, motion blur off, textures high; SA buyers should plan the graphics-card part of the build around R6,000-R45,000, using RTX 4060, RTX 4070 Super, RX 7800 XT as local reference points.

Settings To Start With

Use native 1440p first, then trim the visual settings that hurt frame pacing before reducing texture quality. Start from shadows medium, reflections medium, fog low, motion blur off, textures high. This keeps the image readable while leaving enough GPU headroom for sudden weather, combat effects or dense scenes.

For a clean test, disable heavy overlays, set the monitor to its full refresh rate and cap the game just below the target if frame pacing feels uneven. A stable 60 fps line is more useful than a higher average that dips hard during the busiest scene.

Test Route And SA Build Notes

Benchmark with a garage-to-road test loop with rain and dense trees, not from a quiet menu or empty room. Run the same route twice; the first pass may include shader or asset loading, while the second shows the real steady-state feel.

South African rooms can run warm, so airflow matters. Keep the GPU intake clear, use two case fans as a minimum in compact towers, and check that the power supply has the correct PCIe connector without adapters stretched across the case.

Spend Where It Changes Feel

Do not buy only for the biggest GPU name. At 1440p, monitor refresh, VRAM, fan noise and driver stability all affect the result. If the budget is tight, keep the screen and card matched: 1080p high refresh wants a different spend from 4K high refresh.

FAQ

Can RX 9060 hold 60 fps in Pacific Drive?

Yes, if the settings are tuned for the hardest scenes rather than the cleanest benchmark moment. Use shadows medium, reflections medium, fog low, motion blur off, textures high and retest before assuming the GPU is the problem.

Should SA gamers use upscaling for Pacific Drive?

Use native resolution first at 1080p or 1440p, then use quality-mode upscaling only if the target is not stable. At 4K, quality upscaling can be a sensible way to protect frame pacing.

What should I check before buying the card?

Check case clearance, PSU connectors, monitor resolution and local warranty support. A R6,000-R45,000 graphics-card shortlist should still include cooling and cable fit, not only average fps.

TIP

labelled Pacific Drive profile with the 60 fps cap, 1440p resolution and your chosen effects settings so driver updates can be compared cleanly.