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

While handling incredibly complex biological models, my CPU temps suddenly rocketed from 65°C to 94°C, which made me seriously doubt the smart scheduling of this AIO. The default pump curve on the Cooler Master MasterLiquid B240 is just too sluggish when hitting transient high loads, letting heat build up in the core within a single second. This triggered a brutal clock speed drop from 5.0GHz down to 3.2GHz. I first tried enabling 'Extreme Performance' in the software, but that only shaved off 3°C and introduced a piercing resonance noise from the pump, while the stuttering remained. It was a total waste of time. I eventually dove into the BIOS and forced the pump to 100% full speed, while setting the radiator fans to a non-linear stepped climb between 70°C and 85°C. Monitoring via HWiNFO showed core temps stabilizing in the 68-74°C range, and frame time variance tightened from 15-40ms down to 8-14ms. I actually realized I had mistakenly plugged the fan header into a SYS port instead of the CPU header, which broke the temp linkage; once I swapped the cables, it finally clicked. Liquid temps are now sitting at 34-39°C, and the whole rig feels rock steady. All optimized cooling parameters are saved, and the system is finally behaving. Last updated onMarch 16, 2026 11:24 AM.

Right when I'm unleashing a flashy skill, the screen hits this tiny, weird hitch. In a 60 FPS environment, it feels totally disjointed. I dug into the telemetry and found the SY-Yanlong B550M VRM was spitting out 18-25ms voltage ripples, causing the Vcore to bounce wildly between 1.15V and 1.3V. I tried enabling 'Ultimate Performance' in Windows, but that was a joke; average FPS went up by 3, but the stuttering actually got worse. I finally dove into the BIOS, swapped Load-Line Calibration from Auto to Manual L3 mode, and bumped the CPU core voltage offset to +0.015V to stop the sagging. Running AIDA64, the clocks finally locked in at 4.1-4.3GHz, and the frame time variance shrank from a messy 15-30ms down to a tight 9-16ms. I actually triggered a system protection reboot during my first aggressive attempt, and I had to dial it back by 0.01V to find the sweet spot. VRM temps stayed around 76-83℃. Saved the profile to the motherboard, and it's finally rock steady. Last updated onMarch 6, 2026 8:09 PM.

Whenever I hit those massive open-world vistas in Sword and Fairy 7, the screen just freezes for a fraction of a second, which made me seriously doubt this entry-level drive's controller. The issue is that once the GW3300's dynamic SLC cache fills up, the random read speeds plummet from 2000MB/s to around 600MB/s, creating a massive bottleneck for asset streaming. I first tried disabling all background Windows updates, but that was a waste of time; the stutters didn't budge. I then used a disk management tool to force a defrag on the game partition and enabled AHCI Advanced mode in the BIOS. Checking with CrystalDiskMark, my 4K random reads stabilized from a shaky 32-45MB/s up to a consistent 58-65MB/s, and the map transitions finally stopped hitching. I actually tried lowering the graphics settings first to reduce the load, but since this is a hardware cache issue, it did absolutely nothing until I optimized the write strategy. The drive now sits at a comfortable 42-48℃. All storage parameters are now saved and locked in. Last updated onFebruary 26, 2026 12:20 PM.

Walking through the streets of Insomnia was a total nightmare; I kept hitting these micro-stutters that felt incredibly jarring at 60 FPS. After digging into the telemetry, I found the Colorful H610M-K's VRM was spitting out voltage ripples between 15-22ms, causing the CPU core voltage to bounce violently between 1.1V and 1.25V. I tried slapping the system into 'Ultimate Performance' mode first, but that was a joke—average FPS went up by a measly 2 frames, while the actual stuttering got worse. I eventually dove into the BIOS and flipped the Load-Line Calibration from Auto to Manual L2 mode, then bumped the CPU core voltage offset by +0.01V to keep things steady. Running AIDA64 stress tests showed the clock staying locked between 4.2-4.4GHz, and my frame time variance shrunk from a messy 12-28ms down to a tight 8-14ms. I actually bricked the boot process once with a too-aggressive voltage jump, but backing it off by 0.01V fixed everything. VRM temps sat around 78-85℃. I saved these verified parameters to a motherboard profile, and it's been rock steady since. Last updated onMarch 1, 2026 9:59 AM.

While swinging through Manhattan at top speed, I hit these annoying micro-freezes that lasted a fraction of a second, making me seriously question if PCIe 5.0 is actually worth the hype. I dug into the telemetry and found the Samsung 9100 PRO controller was spiking between 78-84℃ during massive asset streams, triggering a hardware-level thermal throttle that tanked my read speeds from 12000MB/s down to around 3500MB/s. I first tried forcing the M.2 slot to Gen 5 in the BIOS, but that just made the temperature swings more violent and actually increased the frequency of frame drops—a total fail. I eventually updated to the latest Samsung NVMe drivers, set the disk power state to High Performance in Windows, and added a dedicated airflow fan blowing directly on the drive. Monitoring via CrystalDiskInfo showed the core temps stabilized between 62-68℃, and the loading smoothness improved drastically. I even tried dropping the link to Gen 4 to cool it down, but that added 4 seconds to my load times, so the airflow fix was the only real way out. Frame times are now rock steady at 5.1-6.4ms. Last updated onFebruary 26, 2026 12:52 PM.

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