Right as the Leviathan Axe hits an enemy, I'd see this tiny, annoying jump in the animation. It really kills the impact of the combat, though getting it fixed felt amazing. The Gloway DDR5 6000 was struggling with particle consistency between the two 8GB modules, causing the bandwidth to jump erratically between 52-68GB/s under load. I tried enabling 'Game Mode' in Windows, but that only gave me a pathetic 2 FPS boost while the jumpiness remained—a total band-aid solution. I went back to the BIOS, locked the frequency at 5800MHz, loosened the tRAS from 76 to 80, and bumped the voltage to 1.35V. AIDA64 bandwidth tests now show a rock-solid 55-58GB/s, and the jumpy frames are gone. The system refused to boot at 5800MHz at first, but a tiny tweak to 1.37V did the trick. Temps are sitting between 54-60℃, and the performance panel confirms the sync mode is finally working. Last updated onMarch 17, 2026 4:55 PM.
Driving through a storm, my frame rate would suddenly tank from 80 FPS to 45 FPS, making the car nearly impossible to handle. I noticed the CPU was jumping between 82℃ - 87℃, triggering some light throttling. I tried limiting the max CPU frequency in software, but that just cost me 10 FPS overall, which was a dealbreaker. Then I actually looked at the RT620P installation and realized the rear fan was installed backward, just swirling hot air around the case. After flipping the fan and applying a -0.05V voltage offset, core temps plummeted to 64℃ - 70℃ and frame times stabilized at 11-13ms. I did have one scary black screen when I first applied the offset, so I had to dial it back to -0.03V for total stability. Fan speed is holding at 1300 RPM. Comparing the frame curves, the performance mode switch was a total game-changer. Last updated onMarch 12, 2026 6:23 PM.
When the game hits the loop reset loading screen, the speed just plummets. It was actually a bit interesting to see the QLC limits in real-time. Once the Intel 660P 2TB hit 60% capacity, the garbage collection delay kicked in, and my random reads dropped from 300MB/s to a sluggish 120MB/s. I tried a full drive wipe using a third-party tool, but that was a total waste of three hours for a measly 5% gain. I decided to try something more hard-core. I went into the registry and modified the TRIM trigger frequency and manually forced a system-level space reclamation. In CrystalDiskMark, the random read performance jumped back up to 280-310MB/s, shaving about 5 seconds off the load times. I did hit a Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) after the first registry edit, but it stabilized once I changed the trigger interval from 1 hour to 4 hours. Temps are low, around 35-45℃. I switched the drive operating mode via the driver control panel and it's finally sorted. Last updated onMarch 27, 2026 5:07 PM.
Whenever Geralt's sword caught the sunlight, the jagged edges at 4K were just eyesores, totally ruining the visual upgrade of the remake. My Gainward RTX 5070 Ti Snow Step OC hits 2650 MHz, but with DLSS Quality mode on, the reconstruction algorithm wasn't sampling thin lines properly, creating these ugly pixel stairs. I tried switching to DLSS Ultra Performance, and while the FPS shot up to 150, the image became a blurry mess—it looked like a mosaic. It was actually exciting because I knew I was just moving in the wrong direction. I eventually bumped the DLSS sharpening to 65% and pushed the render resolution to 120% to force more samples. In my side-by-side screenshots, the broken edges finally smoothed out and the image looked pure. I did overdo the sharpening at first, which created weird white halos, so I backed it off to 58% for a natural look. VRAM usage was 10.2-11.8GB with temps at 63-68℃. Switched the sampling mode in the NVIDIA panel and it's perfect. Last updated onMarch 22, 2026 9:29 AM.
I've been waiting for this release, only for the loading bar to freeze at 99%—that excitement turned into pure rage real quick. The old BIOS on the Galax H310M had a serious sync conflict with the new anti-cheat instruction sets, causing the CPU to hit a dead loop in 0.1ms. I tried running it in compatibility mode, but while I could hit the main menu, the game crashed the second it tried to load a map, which was a useless workaround. I used the flash tool to update the BIOS to the latest 2026 compatibility version and disabled the unnecessary CSM mode in the boot settings. The instruction set errors in the system logs vanished, and load times dropped from three minutes to about 40 seconds. I actually failed the first flash attempt because my USB drive wasn't FAT32, which was a rookie mistake. Now, the motherboard stays between 45-52℃ and RAM usage is around 11GB. The boot logs confirm the compatibility issue is dead and gone. Last updated onMarch 11, 2026 6:26 PM.