
Just don't forget to clear a modest 50GB of space from your SSD too, as hard drives simply don't make the cut here. On the GPU side of things, an Nvidia GeForce GTX 1070 or AMD Radeon RX 5700 should provide plenty of pixel pushing power to get you on board the USG Ishimura. We’ll provide details about how to see it in the coming days.To meet the Dead Space system requirements, you'll need a gaming PC armed with a quad-core processor that's at least as powerful as the Intel Core i5 6500 or AMD Ryzen 5 2600X, paired with 16GB of RAM. Per the official Dead Space Twitter account, this is a New Game+ ending. Image: Visceral Games/Electronic Arts via Polygon There’s an alternate endingĪrguably the biggest change is the addition of an alternate ending to Dead Space. Selecting one and tracking it will make your Locator guide you there. Side missions will show up in your RIG HUD under the Missions tab. Image: Visceral Games/Electronic Arts via Polygon These are smaller tasks that have you exploring the Ishimura and filling in some of the world building details through gameplay (rather than just audio and text logs). While the larger story hasn’t changed, a new layer of the narrative has been added in the form of side missions. In the remake, it requires you to reroute a circuit breaker from the lights to the door (see our note about darkness above). In the original, this involved grabbing a keycard off a corpse. For example, the first chapter has Isaac retrieving a data board. These don’t change anything about the game, really, but they might be enough to make those old walkthroughs pretty confusing. Related to that, some objectives are different or modified. New objectives often involve turning out the lights. It’s nothing as big as an entirely new floor, but more like zigs where there used to be zags. We mentioned this in our beginner’s guide as well, but a ground-up redesign means that the exact layout of the Ishimura isn’t identical to the original. He’s got a lot more dialogue now, too, bringing his character a lot more in line with Dead Space 2 and 3. More specifically, though, Isaac is no longer an all-but-silent protagonist - and he takes his helmet off a lot more often. The dialogue isn’t exactly the same, but it says the same thing.
