System requirements are there to show what the developers find to be the hardware you should have for stable/normal performance or better. They represent where the game is designed to play. Anyone using anything less than that does so in the sense of caveat emptor. Any issues that arise are more than likely the result of using hardware beneath that level rather than the software itself. That applies to every piece of software ever.
"This is a 2d game" has quite little to do with the technical demands/limits of Terraria, as has been pointed out before. The notion that graphics alone or the number of dimensions is the sole determining factor in system demands is patently untrue.
Of course, people are free to try and assume whatever they want - but I figured it would be prudent to lay out the base facts/situation so that people do not get the wrong impression about what tech reqs actually mean.
"This is a 2d game" has quite little to do with the technical demands/limits of Terraria, as has been pointed out before. The notion that graphics alone or the number of dimensions is the sole determining factor in system demands is patently untrue.
Of course, people are free to try and assume whatever they want - but I figured it would be prudent to lay out the base facts/situation so that people do not get the wrong impression about what tech reqs actually mean.