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The moment a massive summon hit the screen, my FPS would plummet from 90 to 40, and that stuttering completely ruined the spectacle. I noticed memory temps spiking between 62-68℃, which triggered the memory controller to throttle the clock speed. I tried limiting the CPU power in software, but that just lowered my overall FPS by 10, which made me excited to finally try undervolting. I went into the BIOS and set a memory voltage offset of -0.02V, and I even slapped a small 4cm fan directly over the sticks. In RTSS, frame times went from 16-28ms to a rock-solid 12-15ms. I actually tried pushing it to -0.05V, but the system just froze, so I backed it off to -0.02V. Now temps stay between 45-51℃, so no more throttling. Comparing the frame curves, the experience is way smoother now, and temps are locked at 45-51℃. Last updated onMarch 26, 2026 11:06 AM.

During massive raids, my frame rate would dive from 100 FPS to 40 FPS. Honestly, it was almost exciting to see just how hard I could push this tiny cooler. Because the Jonsbo CR-1400 ARGB has such a small fin stack, core temps were skyrocketing to 88°C - 94°C, forcing the CPU into severe thermal throttling. I tried the 'rational' approach of enabling Windows Power Saver, but that just killed my FPS further without fixing the heat. I decided to go nuclear and swapped to a top-tier liquid metal paste, then set the fan curve to hit 2000 RPM the moment it touched 70°C. Monitoring again, the peaks were suppressed to 78°C - 83°C, and the frequency of drops plummeted. I had a bit of a struggle with the liquid metal at first—it wasn't spread evenly, and one core stayed hot—but after a second application, it finally leveled out. Full load temps are now around 81°C. I switched the cooling mode in the software, and the CPU is now staying consistently between 78°C - 83°C. Last updated onFebruary 23, 2026 8:47 AM.

Whenever I hit a complex 3D level, I'd get these random 2-second black screens that totally killed the immersion. The Zhitai TiPro9000 1TB was hitting 94-98% bus saturation during high-frequency random reads, creating a tiny but noticeable queue delay. I tried enabling memory mirroring in the emulator, which made loading faster but pushed my RAM usage to 28GB, causing the whole system to chug. It was actually exciting because it proved the bottleneck was the bus. I went into the BIOS and locked the M.2 slot to Gen4 x4 and killed the power-saving mode in the driver. My latency tester showed random read latency drop from 110ns to about 85-92ns, and the loads became way snappier. The drive ran about 3℃ hotter at low loads, so I slapped a small heatsink on it to bring it back down. Temps are now 46-54℃. Switched the read/write mode in the panel and it's perfect. Last updated onMarch 6, 2026 6:31 PM.

Seeing the 1% lows stabilize above 80 FPS was a huge relief—this is how the game is supposed to feel. Previously, the XMP preset on my MSI MPG Z890 EDGE was running 6400MHz at only 1.3V, which caused 3-5 memory parity errors when loading massive architectural data. I tried downclocking to 6000MHz in the BIOS; the stutters stopped, but I lost 15 FPS in the minimums, which felt like a huge compromise. Instead, I manually bumped the DRAM voltage to 1.38V and tightened the tRFC timing from 480 down to 360. After 4 passes of MemTest86 with zero errors, the micro-stutters in the city were gone. I actually pushed the voltage too far at first and the RAM hit 65℃, triggering a reboot, so I had to rig up a small 12cm fan to blow directly on the slots. Now, memory latency is a tight 62-66ns and frame times are locked at 5.1-6.4ms. Last updated onMarch 8, 2026 2:54 PM.

I finally get to drive the 2025 cars, but with five laps to go, my frame rate crashed from 144 FPS to 60 FPS. The excitement turned into pure rage instantly. The small fins on the Jonsbo CR-1400E just couldn't keep up with the boost clocks; heat built up faster than the fan could blow it out, and my temps climbed from 60℃ to 92℃ in 15 minutes, forcing the CPU to downclock. I tried lowering the graphics settings, but the game looked like a pixelated mess, which was totally unacceptable. I went into the BIOS and flipped the fan control from DC to PWM mode, and bumped my front intake fans to 1200 RPM to force more fresh air in. Looking at the RTSS overlay, the frame times finally stabilized at 6-8ms, and that jittery feeling vanished. I had a brief scare where the fan wouldn't start in PWM mode, but a tiny tweak to 1.2V start-up voltage fixed it. CPU temps are now steady at 72-78℃ with a clock of 4.6 GHz. Performance logs confirm the fix, with frame times now holding at 5.1-6.4ms. Last updated onMarch 23, 2026 1:08 PM.

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