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

Whenever I unleashed a full-screen special, the frame rate would absolutely tank from 120 FPS down to 42 FPS, killing the impact of the combat instantly. After digging into the logs, I found the Biostar B650MT's VRM was struggling with transient loads, causing Vcore to swing wildly by 0.08V - 0.11V. I first tried enabling 'Ultimate Performance' in Windows, but that was a joke; CPU temps spiked to 92°C - 96°C while the stutters remained. I eventually went into the BIOS, switched the Load-Line Calibration (LLC) from Auto to Level 3, and set a manual Vcore offset of +0.02V. Using HWiNFO, I saw the voltage stabilize from a messy 1.16V - 1.24V range down to a rock-steady 1.21V - 1.23V, and frame times dropped from 15-32ms to a crisp 7-11ms. I actually hit a wall early on where aggressive overclocking caused three consecutive BSODs, and I only got it stable after backing the FCLK down to 4.1GHz. VRM temps stayed around 54°C - 60°C with fans humming at 1300-1500 RPM. It was a lengthy struggle with an evasive bug, but the voltage curve is finally flat. Last updated onMarch 5, 2026 4:42 PM.

Whenever I hit a fast parry or counter, the frame rate just tanks from 144 FPS down to 52 FPS out of nowhere, which completely kills my rhythm. Looking at the logs, the Gainward RTX 5070 Ti Snow Step OC 2.0 core was having these violent voltage swings between 0.07V and 0.12V when handling heavy instruction loads. I tried slapping 'Prefer Maximum Performance' in the NVIDIA Control Panel first, but that was a disaster—core temps spiked to 86-91℃ and the stutters didn't even budge. I felt totally lost until I used a tuning tool to bump the power limit to 110% and set a core voltage offset of +0.025V. Monitoring with RTSS, the frame times finally tightened up from a messy 12-28ms range to a rock steady 6-11ms. I actually blue-screened twice trying to push the overclock too hard initially, and only got it stable after backing the memory clock down to 21000MHz. Now, core temps sit comfortably between 68-74℃ with fans humming at 1600-1800 RPM. Stress tests confirm the voltage curve is no longer cratering, with frame times locking in at 6.1-10.8ms. It's a bit of a power hog now, but at least it's playable. Last updated onMarch 18, 2026 10:28 AM.

During intense Boss fights, my frame rate would suddenly tank from 60 FPS down to 38 FPS, and those unpredictable stutters completely messed up my dodge timing. The default fan curve on the Jonsbo CR-1400 ARGB is way too conservative before hitting 80°C, causing CPU core temps to swing wildly between 92°C and 96°C. I first tried enabling power-saving mode in Windows to cut the heat, but while it dropped the temp by 3°C, my 1% lows plummeted to 25 FPS, which was a total waste of time. I eventually dove into the BIOS and slashed the fan step response time from 2 seconds to 0.1 seconds, while forcing the RPM to 90% once it hits 75°C. Monitoring via HWiNFO showed core temps dropping from 96°C to a stable 78-82°C, and frame times stabilized from a messy 18-32ms down to 12-16ms. I did hit a snag where the fans started vibrating like crazy at max speed, but tweaking the 95°C+ ceiling back to 85% fixed the resonance. Now VRM temps sit around 62-68°C and the noise is tolerable. After two hours of stress testing, the throttling is gone and fans are steady at 1400-1600RPM. Last updated onMarch 4, 2026 3:03 PM.

Once my village hit the mid-to-late game, my frame rate would randomly tank from 110 FPS down to 45 FPS, making construction commands feel like they were lagging through molasses. Looking at HWiNFO, the Vcore on my Intel Core i5-14600KF was swinging wildly by 0.06V - 0.1V during heavy simulation loads. I first tried enabling Ultimate Performance mode in Windows, but that was a disaster—temps shot up to 94-98℃ and the stuttering didn't budge, which was beyond frustrating. I eventually dove into the BIOS, switched the Load-Line Calibration (LLC) from Auto to Level 2, and manually set a +0.03V core voltage offset. This tightened the voltage swing from 1.15-1.22V to a rock steady 1.20-1.23V, and my frame times dropped from a jittery 16-30ms to a consistent 8-12ms. I actually blue-screened three times trying to push an aggressive overclock initially, and only got it stable after backing the ring bus down to 4.3GHz. With VRM temps sitting at 58-64℃ and fans humming at 1400-1600 RPM, the voltage curve is finally flat. Everything is saved and stable now. Last updated onMarch 24, 2026 12:46 PM.

Whenever I hit high-density combat zones, the frame drops are brutal, making resource loading feel like a slog. I found that once the SLC cache on the WD Black SN850X 1TB fills up after heavy writes, the response time spikes from 0.05ms to a miserable 2.1-3.4ms. I first tried killing all background scanners in Windows, but it only shaved off 1 second and the stutters remained—a total waste of time. I then dove into Device Manager and bumped the NVMe controller queue depth from 1024 to 2048 and enabled the forced write cache flush policy. Checking with CrystalDiskMark, my 4K random reads jumped from 55-62MB/s to 78-85MB/s, and scene transitions became buttery smooth. Interestingly, the first time I tweaked the queue depth, I hit some weird disk recognition lag during idle, which only vanished after I switched my power plan from Balanced to High Performance. Temps stayed around 45-52℃ with the heatsink doing its job. Performance logs show the read/write curve is no longer cratering, holding steady at 6.2-7.1GB/s. Parameters saved. Last updated onMarch 10, 2026 5:53 PM.

Back to Top