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Watching millions of citizens flow through the streets is great, but the random stutters were killing the vibe. The XMP profile on my Gloway Dragon Warrior DDR5 6000 had a 4-8% checksum error rate on my board, leading to those annoying micro-hitches during peak city loads. I tried lowering the resolution first, but the city looked like a blur, and I realized I had to fix this at the hardware level. I jumped into the BIOS and bumped the DRAM voltage from 1.35V to 1.38V, while slightly loosening the primary timings from 30-36-36-76 to 32-38-38-80. In the frame time analysis, my 1% lows jumped from a pathetic 18 FPS to a much more playable 45 FPS. I did have a few random reboots right after the voltage bump, but loosening the tRFC by 20 units finally stabilized everything. RAM temps hovered around 52-58℃ and VRMs were 62-68℃. The performance panel shows a 10% increase in read/write bandwidth, and the gameplay is finally fluid, though the heat is noticeable. Last updated onApril 13, 2026 11:26 AM.

The difference is staggering. After optimizing the sync frequency, those micro-stutters I kept hitting while sprinting completely vanished, and the visibility feels way more open. The memory controller on the VASTARMOR Radeon RX 9060 XT 16GB was hitting 12-20ms sync delays while handling the dynamic assets of Where Winds Meet, causing frame times to jump between 15-30ms. I first tried enabling 'Ultimate Performance' mode in Windows, but that just made my GPU idle power skyrocket and temps hover around 60℃ without fixing the actual sync conflict. I then went into the driver panel, locked the memory frequency to its maximum state, and killed the Radeon Chill feature. RTSS showed the frame times tighten up from 22-38ms to a crisp 9-13ms, and the responsiveness is now peak. I did have some minor stutters in background apps after locking the frequency, but setting the process priority to 'High' instead of 'Realtime' fixed it. Core temps are now 64-70℃. I've switched the performance mode in the driver control center. Last updated onApril 23, 2026 1:41 PM.

Absolutely mind-blowing. Once I toggled Frame Gen, the game jumped from a mediocre 50 FPS to a silky 90 FPS—the difference is night and day. The Noctua NH-D15 G2 chromax.black is a beast of a cooler, but even with core temps sitting steady between 62°C and 68°C, my frame times were jumping between 22ms and 38ms. I first tried disabling V-Sync to cut the lag, but the screen tearing was so bad it looked like the image was being sliced in half; I was honestly disappointed. I then went into the NVIDIA Control Panel, set Low Latency Mode to 'Ultra', and enabled G-Sync. In the RTSS frame time graph, the jagged spikes turned into a flat line, and the input lag vanished. I did hit a snag where some metallic textures started flickering when I first enabled DLSS Quality mode, but a driver update cleared that right up. Core temps are holding at 65°C to 71°C. Switched the quality profile in the game menu and it's perfect. Last updated onApril 2, 2026 7:42 PM.

The difference after tuning the timings was night and day; those annoying micro-stutters while zooming through the city completely vanished. The 7800X3D's massive cache should be a beast, but with the dynamic assets in Neverness to Everness, my memory latency was fluctuating between 85-98ns, causing frame times to bounce from 12-28ms. I first tried enabling 'Ultimate Performance' mode in Windows, but the CPU just sat at 85℃ and the stutters stayed—clearly, a surface-level fix wouldn't work for a deep sync conflict. I went into the BIOS, locked the RAM at 6000MHz, and set the FCLK to 2000MHz for a perfect 1:1 sync. RTSS showed frame times collapse from 18-35ms down to a tight 7-11ms, which is peak responsiveness. I did experience some random reboots during loading screens when I first pushed PBO too hard, but setting an 85℃ temp wall fixed it. Core temps are now 62-68℃. Switched the performance mode via the AMD Adrenalin software. Last updated onApril 10, 2026 12:31 PM.

The difference is night and day. Once I optimized the queue depth, those annoying micro-stutters while crossing rugged mountains just vanished. The PCIe 5.0 link on the EXCERIA PLUS G4 was struggling with the massive terrain data in Death Stranding 2, causing sync delays of 12-20ms and frame times jumping between 18-32ms. I tried enabling 'Ultimate Performance' mode in Windows, but the drive just sat at 65℃ and the hitching stayed. It was clear that a simple power plan wouldn't fix a low-level I/O conflict. I went into Device Manager and bumped the NVMe controller queue depth from 1024 to 2048. RTSS showed frame times tighten up to 10-14ms, and the response felt incredibly snappy. I did notice some drive detection lag during idle after the change, which disappeared once I switched the power management to High Performance. Temps are now 58-64℃. Switched the performance mode in the system center and it's gold. Last updated onApril 17, 2026 12:51 PM.

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