GTA V was praised for its visuals back when it first launched on last-gen consoles. It was praised once more when it launched on current-gen consoles. Neither time was is praised as much as it was when it launched on PC, where when turned all the way up the game's visuals blew everything out of the water. Even after several large AAA releases, the PC version is still the apex of video game graphics. Let's not even get into visual enhancement mods here, alright?

However, visuals like that come at a hefty price. GTA V may be well optimized so that it runs pretty well on low-end rigs when set to medium or low settings, but venturing into the high and ultra ranges requires beastly rigs. GTA V has been used by PC gamers as a benchmarking tool, seeing just what their machine is truly capable of. In terms of scenery and objects, on ultra settings GTA V seems lifelike, with screenshots easy to mistake for photos. However, you're not going to see any of that first hand if you don't drop some solid cash on hardware. AMD rigs have particular issues with GTA V on top of that, so in terms of GPU, you'll probably have to go with the more expensive nVidia cards.