Buying Guide · Unreal Engine 5

Best PC for Unreal Engine 5 in Canada (2026)

Workstations built for UE5 game development, virtual production, and architectural visualization. RTX-class GPU for Lumen and Nanite, fast multi-core CPU for shader compile.

954 ReviewsGoogle 4.9★
Canada-WideFree Shipping
1-Year WarrantyParts + Labour
Vaughan, ONLocal Support

Unreal Engine Workstation by Workflow

Workflow CPU GPU RAM
Indie game development Ryzen 7 9800X3D / Core Ultra 9 285K RTX 5070 Ti / RTX 5080 32–64GB
Mid-team game dev (multi-app, larger projects) Ryzen 9 9950X3D RTX 5080 / RTX 5090 64GB
AAA / studio game dev Threadripper 9970X (32C) RTX 5090 / RTX PRO 5000 128GB+
Virtual production / archviz Threadripper PRO RTX PRO 6000 Blackwell (96GB) 128–256GB
Why cores matter for UE5: Shader compilation, lighting builds, and Nanite asset cooking all scale with CPU cores. If you wait 30+ minutes for builds, Threadripper pays for itself fast.

FAQ

What GPU do I need for Unreal Engine 5?

Epic recommends RTX 2080-class or newer for modern UE5 features (Lumen, Nanite). For serious development, RTX 5070 Ti or above is the practical floor; RTX 5080 or 5090 is recommended for large scenes and high-resolution viewport work.

How much RAM for Unreal Engine?

32GB is fine for smaller projects. 64GB is the recommended starting point for most UE5 development. Studios working on AAA-scale projects benefit from 128GB+.

Is Threadripper worth it for UE5?

Yes if shader compilation and lighting builds dominate your day. The 32-core 9970X or 64-core 9980X dramatically cut build times compared to consumer CPUs.

Can a gaming PC do Unreal Engine development?

Yes — at the lower end of project size. Indie devs can often work fine on a Ryzen 9 + RTX 5080 build. The line where you need a "real" workstation is when build times start eating hours of your day.

Need help speccing your workstation?

A GamerTech technician will match a build to your software, project size, and budget. Free, no pressure.

Related Buying Guides

Best Unreal Engine PC by Use Case

Use Case CPU GPU RAM
Indie game dev Ryzen 7 / Ryzen 9 RTX 5070 Ti / 5080 32–64GB
Open-world game dev Ryzen 9 / Threadripper RTX 5090 64–128GB
Virtual production Threadripper / Threadripper PRO RTX PRO 5000 / 6000 128–256GB
Architecture visualization Ryzen 9 RTX 5080 / 5090 64–128GB
Film / LED wall workflow Threadripper PRO RTX PRO 6000 256GB+

Unreal Engine PC Mistakes to Avoid

  • Buying only for gaming FPS instead of editor performance.
  • Not buying enough RAM for large assets and Nanite scenes.
  • Cheaping out on storage — UE projects can become huge.
  • Weak CPU causing long shader compile times.
  • Weak GPU/VRAM causing poor viewport performance with Lumen.
✍️
Last updated · April 2026 Written and reviewed by the GamerTech workstation team in Vaughan, Ontario. GamerTech builds custom gaming PCs, workstations, AI PCs, and professional creator systems for customers across Canada — hand-built with full Canada-wide shipping, financing, trade-ins, and 1-year parts & labour warranty. Have a workflow not covered here? Call (905) 247-7085 or email info@gamertech.ca.