Ignore anyone promising a GTA 6 PC FPS number today, because none is measured yet. Do this instead: run the check, see if your rig clears the 1080p target, and save it so you get a real answer the moment benchmarks land.
Stop guessing from spec lists. Run the 60-second check and see exactly where your setup lands, then fix one thing.
Run the readiness tool to see yes, maybe, or no for the target you picked.
Save the result
A saved anonymous result gives you a clean comparison point when official specs or real PC tests arrive.
Avoid guessing FPS
Do not trust exact FPS claims until they come from measured PC benchmarks.
Evidence status
unknown: use this page as a current planning guide. If official PC specs or real benchmark data changes the answer, FrameReady should update the recommendation.
What we know right now
Rockstar has official console platform information. Public PC performance numbers are not available yet.
Official platform listing: PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S.
PC requirements: not confirmed in FrameReady yet.
Real PC FPS averages: not available until measured PC testing is possible.
What you can do today
You can still make a useful decision without pretending the final FPS is known.
Check whether your PC looks ready for a 1080p 60 FPS planning target.
If the result says no, look at the weak point first.
If the result says yes, do not replace parts just because GTA 6 is coming.
What your saved result helps with
Saving is optional, but it makes your result useful later without adding personal contact data.
FrameReady can compare the same rig against future official specs.
Similar hardware groups can be compared once enough anonymous results exist.
You do not need to enter a name, email, location, or personal note.
What to look for after PC benchmarks arrive
A real benchmark is useful only when it includes the settings and hardware context behind the FPS number.
Average FPS and one percent low FPS.
Resolution, target FPS, quality level, and upscaler state.
GPU class, CPU class, RAM, storage type, and patch version.
How to read early benchmark claims
Early numbers can be messy. One result from one PC is not enough to decide what everyone should buy.
Prefer tests that show the full PC setup and settings.
Watch for patch version, driver version, and resolution.
Treat tiny sample sizes as a clue, not a final answer.
Related next steps
System requirements status
See what is official before reading performance estimates.