The visuals are stunning and the 6000MHz speed should make it fly, but these random drops are driving me crazy. My Gloway Celestial Strategy 32GB DDR5 was jumping between 4800-6000MHz because the motherboard's memory controller kept losing sync during physics-heavy fights. I tried enabling 'Extreme Performance' in the BIOS, but the RAM hit 65℃ and the whole system rebooted—way too aggressive. I eventually locked the memory divider to 1:1 and nudged the VDD voltage to 1.35V. In my side-by-side tests, frame times stopped swinging between 15-35ms and settled at a smooth 12-18ms. I wasted a few hours trying to fix this with driver updates, but that just slowed down my boot time. Temps are now stable at 52-58℃. Switched the system profile to stability-first and it is finally a smooth ride. Last updated onApril 18, 2026 5:23 PM.
I'm seeing major thread scheduling delays and stutters in dense clouds in MSFS 2024, why this?
AI FiltersJust as I was enjoying the view from 30,000 feet, the smoothness vanished and was replaced by a massive 200ms lag spike, which is lethal in a flight sim. The Onda A520-VH-W chipset was struggling with multi-threaded scheduling, leaving some cores at 3.8GHz while others just sat idle, creating huge wait times. I tried enabling Windows Game Mode, but that just slowed down my background apps and did nothing for the lag—I was honestly tempted to just reboot the whole rig in frustration. I went into Task Manager, set the game process to 'High' priority, and disabled all CPU power-saving features in the BIOS. In RTSS, the frame time variance dropped from 35-70ms to a much tighter 18-24ms. I did hit a brief black screen during the first boot after changes, but a voltage recalibration fixed it. Board temps are 45-52℃. Resource calling logic is finally optimized. Last updated onMay 6, 2026 8:50 PM.
The game looks stunning in 4K, but the sudden frame plunges were driving me insane. The VRM heatsinks on the Jginyue B760M GAMING D4 just couldn't keep up with my high-power CPU, with temps hitting 92℃ - 102℃ after an hour, which triggered aggressive thermal throttling. I tried enabling 'Extreme Performance' in the BIOS, but the temps spiked to 108℃ and the whole system just rebooted—it was a wake-up call that you can't ignore cooling. I ended up rigging a small 4cm fan to blow directly onto the VRMs and set a -0.05V offset in the BIOS voltage curve. In comparative tests, the core clock stayed locked at 4.5GHz without any drops. Before the fan, I tried lowering the CPU frequency to manage heat, but the FPS tanked to 45, which was totally unplayable. VRM temps now stay between 65℃ - 72℃. I switched the power plan to 'Balanced' in the control panel, and the performance mode is now stable. Last updated onApril 25, 2026 1:19 PM.
Is a driver preset change needed for the Vastarmor RX 9070 XT to fix scheduling lag in TLOU 2 PC?
AI FiltersWhile sneaking through the ruins, the fluidity just vanished, replaced by a glaring 180ms delay that's basically a death sentence in a stealth game. The core scheduling on the Vastarmor RX 9070 XT was a mess; some compute units were pegged at 2.8 GHz while others sat idle, creating massive wait times. I tried 'Low Latency Mode' in-game, but it just bumped the temp by 5℃ without improving the feel—I was honestly tempted to just reboot the whole PC in frustration. I then went into the advanced driver settings, switched the rendering preset to 'Performance,' and locked the memory clock at 2400 MHz. RTSS showed frame times stabilizing from 30-60ms down to 14-20ms. I did notice some slight artifacting on textures after switching to performance mode, but a driver update cleared that right up. GPU temps are now 66-72℃. The resource allocation is finally optimized, and the game feels responsive again. Last updated onMay 8, 2026 1:48 PM.
My MSI MPG Z890 EDGE keeps crashing during Naraka fights; should I recalibrate the memory timings?
AI FiltersThe combat in Naraka looks insane with 8000MHz RAM, but the random crashes were absolutely infuriating. The memory controller on the MSI MPG Z890 EDGE was struggling with heavy physics calculations, and because the XMP profile was too aggressive, the voltage was bouncing between 1.1-1.3V. I first tried the 'Extreme Performance' mode in BIOS, but my RAM temps spiked to 68℃ and the system just rebooted—I was shocked at how unstable that preset was. I manually loosened the primary timings from 36-36-36-76 to 38-38-38-80 and locked the SOC voltage at 1.28V. This dropped my crash rate from once an hour to zero. I tried a BIOS update before this, but it just added 10 seconds to my boot time and did nothing for stability. Now RAM temps stay between 55-62℃. I switched the memory mode to 'Stability Priority' in the control panel, and temps are now a cool 52-58℃. Last updated onApril 16, 2026 5:00 PM.