One second I'm hitting a perfect headshot and feeling the rush, the next, a random frame drop kills my momentum. The I/O scheduling on the Kioxia EXCERIA PLUS G4 is way too aggressive with fragmented resources, causing read response times to bounce between 1ms and 20ms. This pushed my frame times from 11ms up to a jarring 32ms. I tried disabling all background apps in Windows, but the I/O spikes didn't budge—just a waste of effort. I went into the BIOS, disabled PCIe Link State Power Management, and forced the drive into High Performance mode. Monitoring with RTSS, the frame time jitter dropped from 10-30ms to a tight 12-15ms. The game feels way more responsive now. My idle drive temp jumped by 5℃ after killing the power management, but I adjusted my case airflow to compensate. Drive is steady at 52-58℃, motherboard at 60-66℃. The scheduling mode is finally locked in. My aim feels consistent again. Last updated onMarch 10, 2026 4:00 PM.
Seeing my read speeds locked at 3000MB/s while running 4K Path Tracing felt like a slap in the face for a PCIe 4.0 drive. The FireCuda 540 2TB was struggling with the massive asset stream in Overdrive mode; the old firmware caused the I/O request queue to timeout whenever it hit 128, making my FPS jitter violently around 60. I tried 'Low Latency Mode' in the drivers, but that was useless—I gained 2 FPS but the input lag became unbearable. I finally flashed the latest manufacturer firmware and forced the M.2 slot to Gen4 in the BIOS. Bandwidth tests immediately shot up to 6800-7200MB/s and the smoothness is night and day. I had some weird drive wake-up issues initially, but disabling power saving fixed it. Temps are stable at 52-58℃ with response times down to 22-28ns. Frame times are now locked at 5.1-6.4ms. Last updated onMarch 28, 2026 8:56 AM.
The scale of the sandworms is incredible, but the visual glitches were killing the vibe. While the 7650 GRE is efficient, FSR was over-smoothing the edges, leaving the 4K image looking muddy. I tried disabling FSR for native resolution, but my FPS plummeted from 72 to 38, which was a total dealbreaker. I went into the AMD Adrenalin software, pushed the RSR sharpening to 75%, and manually locked the in-game render scale to 105%. Monitoring via RivaTuner, the effective pixel count increased, and the sand textures became crisp again. I actually pushed sharpening to 100% at first, but it created hideous white halos around objects, so I backed it off to 72% for a natural look. Core temps are 64-70℃, fans at 1600-1800 RPM. The image is finally sharp, though FSR still has some ghosting in fast motion. Last updated onMarch 5, 2026 8:27 PM.
Is my DeepCool AK500 White ARGB causing thermal throttling and frame drops in Like a Dragon: Ishin?
AI FiltersDuring intense sword duels in the streets of Kyoto, the combat felt great until the sudden, unexplained frame drops hit. The DeepCool AK500 White ARGB was struggling with heat soak during prolonged loads, leaving the core temps hovering between 85-92℃, which triggered a slight CPU downclock. I first tried 'Power Saver' mode to reduce heat, but that just tanked the AI calculation speed and increased loading times by 30%—a frustratingly inefficient attempt. I eventually went into the BIOS, switched the fan curve from 'Auto' to 'Performance', and cranked the speed to 85% once the CPU hit 65℃, while also improving the front intake airflow. In AIDA64 stress tests, core temps stabilized at 74-79℃, and the frame rate range tightened from 40-60 FPS to a steady 55-62 FPS. The fans were way too loud at low loads initially, but setting a 5℃ hysteresis interval brought back the silence. CPU power draw is now holding at 90-110W. Real-time monitoring confirms the cooling logic is working, with fans steady at 1400-1600 RPM. Last updated onMarch 16, 2026 10:27 AM.
I'm getting instant overheating and frame drops during AOE skills in GBF Relink with my B240.
AI FiltersWhen the screen fills up with flashy skill effects, the combat feels amazing—until the lag hits. The Cooler Master B240 had a PWM response delay of 180-220ms during these power bursts, which sent my core temps from 55℃ to 92℃ in literally one second. I tried a power-saving mode in the drivers, but that just slowed down my loading times by 10% while only dropping temps by 3℃, which was a total waste of time. I went into the BIOS and flipped the pump from 'Smart' to 'Full Speed' and moved the radiator fan trigger to 45℃. Using RivaTuner, the frame times tightened up from 22-40ms to a consistent 14-18ms, and the stuttering just vanished. The pump had a high-pitched whine at first, but a custom silent curve for the radiator fans balanced it out. CPU temps now sit steady at 64-70℃. It's a night and day difference. Last updated onMarch 16, 2026 7:42 PM.