GamePP Frequently Asked Questions - Professional Hardware Monitoring Software FAQ Knowledge Base

The vistas in the west look stunning with 16GB of VRAM, but these occasional tears are just ruining the vibe. The Sapphire RX 9070 XT driver was struggling with 4K sync, where the FreeSync range didn't quite align with my panel, causing frame times to drift by 8ms - 15ms. I tried disabling SAM in the BIOS first, but my FPS dropped by 12, which was a shocking trade-off for 'stability.' I eventually updated to the latest Adrenalin drivers and switched the sync mode to Enhanced Sync. In my tests, the tearing vanished completely, and the input lag only increased by a negligible 2ms. I actually tried lowering the refresh rate to fix it before, but that just made the game feel choppy and unresponsive. Core temps are now a steady 62℃ - 68℃, with VRAM hitting 85℃ - 90℃. I set the image sync to Enhanced priority in the control panel, and it's finally smooth, though the VRAM heat is still a bit high. Last updated onMay 2, 2026 3:33 PM.

The moment I switched characters in battle, that smooth transition just vanished, replaced by a jarring 200 ms delay that is absolutely lethal in fast combat. The memory controller on the Gloway Dragon Warrior DDR5 6000 was struggling with voltage stability at high frequencies, causing tiny checksum errors that forced the CPU to re-read data. I tried enabling 'Low Latency Mode' in-game, but it just bumped my GPU temps up by 5℃ without improving response time—I was so annoyed I almost threw my PC. I went into the BIOS, changed the memory controller voltage from Auto to a manual 1.25V, and tightened the tRFC from 480 to 400. In AIDA64, latency dropped from 78 ns to 65 ns, and the game finally felt responsive. I had some brief black screens at 1.25V, so I bumped it to 1.28V for total stability. Temps were 55℃ - 62℃. The resource call logic is finally sorted. Last updated onApril 14, 2026 8:18 PM.

The 4K visuals are stunning, but the instant CPU overheating and crashes were driving me insane. The Cooler Master B360 Core pump was trapping air bubbles because of a bad radiator position, causing cooling efficiency to plummet from 100% to 30% in a second. I first tried cranking the pump voltage in the BIOS, but that was a disaster—the bubbles just churned violently and the noise was deafening. I eventually moved the radiator from the top to the front of the case and used the tilt-and-shake method to bleed the air, making sure the pump was the lowest point in the loop. In my monitoring software, the peak temps dropped from 95℃ to a manageable 72-78℃, and the crashes stopped completely. I did notice a slight kink in the tubing after the move, but I fixed it with some better cable ties. Water temps are now a steady 30-34℃. Switched the profile to Extreme Performance, and it's finally stable. Last updated onApril 25, 2026 10:27 PM.

Fighting ghosts in the forests of New Eden was a disaster; the smooth combat suddenly turned into a 10 FPS slideshow. The quad-channel memory scheduling on the Jginyue X99 Titanium was completely unbalanced during heavy physics calculations, with some channels pegged at 95% while others sat idle. This resource mismatch created massive CPU wait times. I tried increasing the virtual memory page file in Windows, but that just made my SSD activity light go crazy without fixing a single frame—it was a total waste of effort. I went into the BIOS $\rightarrow$ Memory Advanced and changed the Interleave Mode from 'Auto' to 'Forced Quad Channel' and bumped the memory controller voltage to 1.2V. In RTSS, my frame times stopped jumping between 40-70ms and settled into a clean 16-22ms range. I did notice the boot time increased by about five seconds after the change, but disabling 'Fast Boot' fixed it. The CPU stays between 65°C - 72°C, and the RAM is stable at 58°C - 63°C. Last updated onMay 4, 2026 8:21 PM.

The medieval streets looked great and loaded fast on this 2TB drive, but these random micro-stutters were driving me crazy. The Great Wall GW3300 link was struggling with massive scene models; due to some motherboard signal interference, I was seeing micro-second packet loss when hitting peaks of 3.2-3.8GB/s. I tried forcing Gen4 mode in the BIOS, but that actually made the stutters worse—a frustrating lesson in chasing raw speed over stability. I eventually switched the link speed to Gen3. Even though the theoretical bandwidth was halved, the signal became rock solid. Frame time variance dropped from 15-40ms down to 12-18ms. I tried updating the storage drivers first, but that just slowed down my boot time with zero gain. The drive is now chilling at 45-52℃. I set the storage mode to 'Stability Priority' in the control panel, and frame generation is now a steady 5.1-6.4ms. Last updated onApril 9, 2026 2:20 PM.

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