When the city hits its limit, the sheer volume of high-fidelity assets pushes the Crucial DDR5 4800MHz 16GB bandwidth to the absolute ceiling, causing frame times to swing wildly between 15-45ms. I first tried killing every useless background service in Windows, but it only gained me about 2 FPS—a pathetic improvement that made me seriously question my RAM capacity. I eventually dove into the Registry Editor to manually enable Large Page memory allocation and locked my virtual memory at a fixed 24GB. Checking Resource Monitor, the memory commit dropped from a critical 15.8GB down to a stable 12.4-13.1GB, and that annoying hitching while zooming out finally vanished. To be fair, the first time I enabled Large Pages, the game crashed twice with memory access violations during mod loading. I had to nudge the motherboard RAM voltage from 1.1V to 1.15V to actually get it stable. With RAM temps sitting at 42-48℃ and CPU load between 75-82%, the performance analyzer confirms throughput is finally flat, with frame times locked in at 12-18ms. Last updated onMarch 15, 2026 7:22 PM.
The complex physics calculations during takeoff cause a massive CPU power spike, and the VRM on the Galax B760M D4 Wi-Fi White Phantom just can't keep up, leading to tiny voltage drops. I saw my frame times jump from 11ms to a staggering 42ms. I first tried enabling 'Ultimate Performance' in Windows, but that was a disaster—frequencies stayed at 5.1GHz, but the voltage swings actually got worse, leaving me completely baffled. I eventually dove into the BIOS, set the CPU Core Voltage Offset to +0.035V, and locked the power limit at 180W. Using HWiNFO, I watched the voltage stabilize from a wild 1.22-1.31V range down to a tight 1.27-1.29V. The micro-stutters vanished. It wasn't a clean fix though; the system rebooted twice while loading maps until I set the Load-Line Calibration to Medium mode. Now, VRM temps sit at 62-68℃ with fans humming at 1200-1400 RPM. A final run through the motherboard's benchmark tool confirmed the current curve is finally flat, holding steady at 1.27-1.29V. Last updated onMarch 13, 2026 6:52 PM.
During high-speed dive attacks, my CPU temps spiked to 88-92℃, causing the clock speeds to bounce erratically between 3.2-4.5GHz. This stuttering made the controls feel completely mushy. The default fan profile on the Jonsbo CR-1400E is way too conservative under 70℃, meaning heat builds up faster than the fins can dump it. I tried switching the Windows power plan to Balanced, which dropped temps by 3℃ but tanked my 1% lows from 65 FPS to 42 FPS—totally unacceptable. I eventually dove into the BIOS and tweaked the fan curve: 50% speed at 60℃ and a forced 100% blast at 80℃, while setting a core voltage offset of -0.05V. Monitoring via HWiNFO showed full-load temps stabilized between 76-82℃. The fan noise was a nightmare at first until I implemented a stepped ramp between 60-70℃, settling the RPMs at 1400-1600. It's rock steady now, though the fan whine is still noticeable. Last updated onMarch 13, 2026 1:22 PM.
During heavy pushes, my CPU power draw spiked over 80W, causing the VRMs on this Soyo SY-A320D4+ to dip in voltage. This sent my frame times jumping from 18ms to a choppy 45ms. I tried enabling 'Ultimate Performance' in Windows, but that was a mistake—frequencies stayed at 3.6GHz, but the voltage swings actually got worse. I had to dive into the BIOS, set a positive CPU Core Voltage Offset of 0.02V, and hard-cap the Power Limit (PL1/PL2) at 65W. Using HWiNFO, I saw the voltage stabilize from a wild 1.10-1.22V range down to a tight 1.15-1.18V. The micro-stutters vanished. It wasn't a clean ride, though; I hit two random reboots during map loads until I switched the Load-Line Calibration (LLC) to Medium. VRM temps settled between 68-74℃ with fans humming at 1300-1500 RPM. After running a stress test, the current curve finally flattened out, and my frame times locked in at a rock-steady 5.1-6.4ms. My hands aren't shaking from lag anymore. Last updated onMarch 20, 2026 6:32 PM.
While pushing high-precision shadow rendering, I noticed a nightmare scenario where CPU core temps spiked from 64°C to 92°C in just ten seconds, causing the clock speed to tank from 5.2GHz to 3.6GHz. The dual-tower setup of the Huntkey Blizzard T600 should have handled it, but the default thermal logic had a massive lag when dealing with these transient power bursts, leading to erratic frame time jumps between 35-55ms. I first tried slamming the fans to full speed in the BIOS, which kept temps at 80°C, but the resonance noise made my entire chassis shake—totally unbearable. I eventually went back into the BIOS to redefine the stepped frequency, forcing the fan speed from 55% up to 82% at the 72°C trigger point and slashing the fan start delay from 2 seconds down to 0.6 seconds. Monitoring via HWInfo showed core temps finally locking into a stable 71-78°C range, and frame times converged from a chaotic mess to a steady 13-17ms. I did hit a snag where the fans would 'hunt' or rev up and down during low loads at 82%, but tweaking the hysteresis to 0.7 seconds smoothed it out completely. The heatsink surface stayed around 40-45°C. After a stress test, the thermal logic is rock steady, and frame times are consistently 13-17ms. Last updated onMarch 17, 2026 3:53 PM.