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

During heavy combat with lots of explosions, my PC would just reboot without any warning—absolutely infuriating for a new architecture. The Ryzen 7 9700X was swinging between 1.1V and 1.3V under PBO, and those spikes were triggering the internal CPU protection. I tried disabling virtualization in Windows, but that didn't stop the crashes and just broke some of my other apps—a complete waste of time. I eventually went into the BIOS, set the Curve Optimizer to -20, and added a +0.02V offset to the core voltage. I ran Prime95 for 6 hours straight and didn't see a single error; the reboots are finally gone. I actually tried -30 at first, but the system wouldn't even POST, so -20 is the sweet spot for my chip. Temps are steady at 72-80℃ with fans at 2200 RPM. I exported the profile so I don't have to do this again. It's finally rock solid. Last updated onApril 29, 2026 12:05 PM.

Trying to run the Enhanced Edition on these ancient DDR3 sticks was a joke; the game would just crash every twenty minutes. System logs were flooded with memory management errors, meaning the chips just couldn't hold a stable voltage at 1600 MHz. I tried enabling 'Memory Enhancement' in the BIOS, but that was a disaster—crashes went from once an hour to once every ten minutes. I was honestly about to give up. I ended up downclocking the RAM to 1333 MHz and manually bumping the voltage from 1.5V to 1.55V, while loosening the tRAS timings. After six hours of Prime95 stress testing with zero errors, the game finally stopped crashing. I lost about 15% of my memory bandwidth, but in-game FPS only dropped by about 3 frames. Stability is way more important than a few numbers. RAM is sitting at 40-45℃ and VRMs are at 55-62℃. Backed up the stable BIOS profile so I don't have to do this again. Last updated onApril 6, 2026 4:10 PM.

The pump sound was like having a miniature power drill inside my chassis—absolutely ridiculous. The Valkyrie V360 LOKI defaults to 100% pump speed, and while temps stayed at 60-65℃ during heavy rendering, the 400Hz resonance made my entire desk vibrate. I tried the 'Silent' preset in the software, but the temp spiked to 88℃ instantly—such a useless preset. I eventually went into the BIOS and locked the pump PWM duty cycle at 75%, then moved the radiator from the top to the front to change how the vibrations traveled. My noise levels dropped from 42dB to about 31dB, and the CPU only warmed up to 68-72℃. I had a brief issue with coolant flow after the change, but bumping the fan speeds by 200 RPM fixed the loop. Water temps are steady at 38-42℃. I saved the snapshot so the settings are permanent. Last updated onApril 24, 2026 8:38 PM.

Every time I tried to jump between galaxies, the game would just vanish to the desktop. The randomness was infuriating. It turns out the Kioxia Exceria Pro 2TB was triggering driver-level timeout errors during 4K random R/W, which paralyzed the whole system. In a fit of desperation, I moved the game to an old HDD, but the load times went from 10 seconds to 2 minutes—absolute torture. I eventually downloaded the latest official firmware and used a partition tool to re-verify the 4K alignment. After that, I did 20 fast travels in a row without a single crash. I actually had a checksum failure during the first firmware attempt, but disabling my antivirus and rebooting did the trick. The drive now stays between 45-53℃ with 100% health. I took a snapshot of the optimized partition table just in case, and the drive temps are holding steady at 45-53℃. Last updated onApril 23, 2026 3:35 PM.

This Onda board basically has a meltdown under heavy 3D rendering; it would just crash every 30 minutes. Event Viewer was flooded with memory management errors, and it was clear the memory controller couldn't handle 6000MHz. I tried enabling 'Memory Enhancement' in the BIOS, but that was a disaster—it actually made the crashes happen every 10 minutes instead of every hour. I eventually dropped the RAM frequency to 5600MHz, set the SoC voltage to a manual 1.2V, and loosened the tRFC timings. After that, Prime95 ran for 12 hours straight without a single error, and the game stopped crashing. I lost about 4ns of latency, but honestly, you can't feel that in-game, and stability is way more important. RAM is now 45-51℃ and VRMs are 65-72℃. I used the board's export tool to save these BIOS settings, and the RAM temp is staying at 45-51℃. Last updated onApril 27, 2026 10:20 PM.

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