Seeing Kyoto in detail is amazing, but the random crashes were a total buzzkill. The Soyo SY-Classic B660M memory controller struggles with high-frequency DDR5, with SoC voltage swinging wildly between 1.1V and 1.2V, causing checksum errors during large page allocations. I tried enabling Windows Game Mode, but that did absolutely nothing. I went into the BIOS, locked the SoC voltage at 1.25V, and tightened the timings from 36-36-36-76 to 32-38-38-72. In AIDA64, read speeds jumped from 48GB/s to 54-58GB/s with zero errors over three hours. My boot time slowed down by about 10 seconds initially, but disabling the memory training option fixed that. RAM temps are 52-58℃ and CPU is 68-74℃. Benchmarks show the system is finally stable, with fans steady at 1400-1600 RPM. Last updated onApril 10, 2026 6:00 PM.
Granblue Fantasy: Relink drops from 60 to 30 FPS during combat on Kingbank 8GB 3600. Fix?
AI FiltersWhenever I unleash a screen-clearing skill, the frame rate just tanks from 60 to 30, which is a total buzzkill in the middle of a fight. The default XMP profile on the Kingbank Yin Jue 8GB 3600MHz was fighting with my motherboard, causing the memory controller to bounce between 3200-3600MHz. I tried lowering the in-game settings, but the game looked like mud and the drops stayed, which was unacceptable. I went into the BIOS, locked the frequency at 3200MHz, and bumped the voltage from 1.35V to 1.38V for absolute stability. RTSS showed frame times tightening from 16-35ms to 11-15ms. Interestingly, I actually lost 2 FPS after locking 3200MHz until I manually tuned the secondary timings. RAM temps are steady at 45-51℃. The mode switch is finally confirmed. Last updated onApril 27, 2026 4:14 PM.
Landing a perfect guard feels amazing, but that feeling is instantly killed when a micro-stutter hits right at the peak of the action. The default scheduling on the Colorful B760M-D PRO V20 was messing up the task split between P-cores and E-cores, causing a 5-10ms delay as the main game thread bounced between cores. I tried the standard 'Game Mode' fix in Windows, but it did nothing—just a total waste of time. I eventually used a process affinity tool to force the game onto the P-Cores and locked the minimum processor state to 100% in the power plan. In Task Manager, the core load went from erratic spikes to a smooth distribution, and the stutters vanished. The only downside was that my background apps felt a bit sluggish for a second, which I fixed by assigning them specifically to the E-Cores. CPU temps are now stable at 65-71℃ with fans at 1400-1600 RPM. Profiling tools show the scheduling latency is gone, with frame times locked at 5.1-6.4ms. Last updated onApril 29, 2026 10:23 AM.
Zenless Zone Zero takes forever to get past the initial self-test, should I optimize BIOS?
AI FiltersAfter clicking the launch icon, I was staring at a black screen for ten full seconds before the logo even appeared. In a fast-paced action game, that kind of delay is just frustrating. The default boot strategy on the ASRock H310CM-ITX/ac was scanning every single USB device, adding a massive 8-12 second lag to the initialization. I tried swapping in a faster SSD, but that only shaved off about a second—a total band-aid solution. I finally went into the BIOS, disabled the redundant network boot options in the Fast Boot menu, and locked the boot order to just the system drive. My boot timer showed the POST time drop from 15 seconds to a crisp 4-6 seconds. I did accidentally lock myself out of the OS after disabling network boot due to a config error, but I fixed it by recalibrating the CSM mode. Board idle temps are steady at 32-38℃. The system panel confirms the boot mode switch worked, and temps are still 32-38℃. Last updated onApril 3, 2026 2:02 PM.
Seeing those wasteland vistas is amazing, but the VRAM overflow stutters totally killed the vibe. The 8GB on the Manli RTX 5060 is barely enough for 4K textures, forcing the system to swap to slow system RAM, which caused massive 20-40ms spikes. I tried the usual Windows Game Mode trick, but it did nothing—just a placebo. I dove into the NVIDIA Control Panel, set the shader cache to 10GB, and manually locked the virtual memory to a fixed 32GB-64GB range. In Task Manager, the VRAM peak stayed around 7.2-7.8GB, and those instant freezes stopped. I noticed the system took about 5 seconds longer to boot after the page file change, but cleaning up my startup apps fixed that. Temps are chilling at 65-71℃ with fans at 1400-1600 RPM. The internal profiler shows the VRAM pressure is gone, and frame times are finally sitting at 5.1-6.4ms. Last updated onApril 24, 2026 4:20 PM.