Right in the middle of those high-octane fights, my frame rate would suddenly tank to 60 FPS, turning the excitement into pure frustration. Looking at the telemetry, the 5090 D v2 was pushing 2.6 GHz, but the core voltage had a 10-15ms sync delay during complex lighting effects. I tried DLSS 3 Frame Gen, but it introduced weird ghosting artifacts around the edges, which was totally unacceptable. I used a tuning tool to redraw the voltage curve, bumping the voltage above 2.5 GHz from 1.05V to 1.08V and slightly increasing the SoC voltage. In CPU-Z memory tests, the core response latency dropped from 82ns to 71ns, and the in-game drops practically disappeared. I did have some annoying fan speed jumps at idle after the voltage bump, but switching to a manual fan profile killed that. GPU temps are steady at 64-70°C and VRAM is 72-78°C. Performance mode is now locked in, though the power draw is slightly higher. Last updated onApril 5, 2026 6:28 PM.
Granblue Fantasy: Relink stutters during heavy particle effects on ADATA DDR4 2666; tighten timings?
AI FiltersSeeing the 1% Lows jump from 28 to 45 FPS was an absolute rush! The stock timings on the ADATA ValueRAM DDR4 2666 are way too conservative; during particle-heavy fights, bandwidth utilization was stuck at 65%, causing frame times to swing between 22 - 38 ms. I tried the 'Performance Enhancement' mode in the drivers, but it just made the minimums more erratic, which was beyond frustrating. I went into the BIOS and manually crushed the primary timings from 19-19-19-43 down to 16-18-18-38 and pushed the voltage to 1.3V. My performance analyzer showed bandwidth climbing from 32 GB/s to 38 - 42 GB/s. I had one boot failure at the start, but adding 4 cycles to tRAS stabilized it. Temps are a cool 40 - 46℃ and the frame times are now a rock-solid 5.1 - 6.4 ms. Last updated onMarch 25, 2026 6:23 PM.
Nioh 2 keeps crashing with instruction set errors on my ASRock A320M-HDV R4.0. Chipset drivers?
AI FiltersThere is nothing like the feeling of that snappy combat returning after a long struggle with crashes. But man, after the latest patch, I kept getting memory access violations that just killed the mood. I tried running the game in compatibility mode, but that just bloated the load times by 10 seconds and didn't stop the crashes—it was just surface-level nonsense. I went to the AMD site, grabbed the latest chipset drivers, and disabled CSM in the BIOS. I ran MemTest86 and watched the error rate drop from 3 per hour to zero; now it boots 100% of the time. I did run into a wall where the drive wouldn't boot after disabling CSM, but I fixed that by converting my partition table from MBR to GPT. CPU temps are staying between 65-72℃. The transition to UEFI boot was a pain, but the stability is finally where it needs to be for a soulslike game. Last updated onApril 17, 2026 1:24 PM.
The moment a big explosion hit the screen, my FPS would crater to 40. That kind of performance gap turns excitement into pure frustration. Looking at the data, the AK500 had a 5-10ms lag in thermal transfer during peak power draws, letting the core hit 92℃ instantly. I tried 'Power Saver' mode in Windows, which dropped the temps but killed my FPS to 30—totally unacceptable. I ended up stripping the cooler and applying high-conductivity thermal paste, then shortened the fan response time in BIOS from 2 seconds to 0.5 seconds. Under CPU-Z stress tests, the temp range tightened to 74-80℃, and the stutters in-game mostly disappeared. I had some weird temp fluctuations right after the repaste, but a few manual stress runs helped the paste spread properly. Now it's stable at 72-78℃ with fans at 1600-1900 RPM. The in-game overlay confirms it's finally holding steady. Last updated onApril 6, 2026 10:05 AM.
Seeing my 1% lows jump from 35 FPS to 58 FPS was an absolute game-changer! The default XMP on the Onda 9D4-DVH is unstable, with the memory controller bouncing between 1.2V and 1.35V, which caused that annoying screen jitter. I tried using 'Performance Boost' in the drivers, but while my peak FPS went up by 3, the minimums became even more erratic—it was a total fail. I went into the BIOS, locked the DRAM voltage at 1.36V, and manually set the timings to 16-18-18-36. After 4 passes of MemTest86, the error count dropped from 8 to zero. I had a couple of failed boots at first, but bumping the SoC voltage to 1.1V stabilized everything. Now the RAM stays cool at 42-48℃, and the frame time is a consistent 6.2-7.8ms. Last updated onApril 3, 2026 10:15 AM.