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

Running a single 8GB stick of DDR5 in 2026 is honestly a hardware joke, and it shows. After scouring tech forums, I found that ADATA ValueRAM 8GB DDR5 4800 has serious single-channel addressing conflicts on some B760 boards, which leads to crashes during large scene loads. I tried adding 16GB of virtual memory, but that just doubled the loading times without actually fixing the crashes—a total waste of time. I decided to risk a BIOS update to the latest stable version and manually downclocked the RAM from 4800MHz to 4400MHz to improve compatibility. After an 8-hour stress test, the system didn't crash once. I did notice some slight frame drops in a few areas after the downclock, but nudging the voltage to 1.15V smoothed everything out. Temps are between 38-44℃, and it's surprisingly stable now. I exported all the BIOS tweaks to a config file so I don't have to do this again. Temps are steady at 38-44℃, but I'm definitely upgrading to 32GB as soon as possible. Last updated onApril 22, 2026 11:55 AM.

This budget board is a joke; crashing in a racing game is just embarrassing. After digging through forums, I found that early BIOS versions for the Onda A520-VH-W have terrible DX12 support, especially when hitting high-frequency memory addresses. I tried turning off ray tracing, which helped a bit, but I was still crashing every two hours—a total waste of time. I took the risk and flashed the latest v1.21 BIOS via USB, then did a full CMOS reset. After a 10-hour stress test, not a single crash. One annoying thing: the BIOS flash reset my RAM to 2133MHz, so I had to manually re-enable XMP to get back to 3200MHz. Board temps are sitting at 40-50℃ and it's actually stable now. I exported all the BIOS settings to a config file just in case. It's a cheap board, but it finally behaves. Board temp is holding steady at 40-50℃. Last updated onApril 26, 2026 12:47 PM.

This board is a joke; I can't believe a simple MMO could crash this hard. It's a total hardware disaster. After scouring the forums, I found that early BIOS versions for the Jginyue B760M Gaming D4 have terrible support for high-frequency RAM, often timing out when calling large memory blocks. I tried increasing the virtual memory paging file, but that just doubled my loading times while the crashes kept happening—a complete waste of time. I took the risk and flashed the latest stable BIOS, then did a full CMOS reset. After 10 hours of straight stress testing, not a single crash. One annoying thing: the BIOS reset my RAM to 2133MHz, so I had to manually re-enable XMP to get back to 3200MHz. The board stays between 42-52℃ and is surprisingly stable now. I exported all my tweaks to a config file just in case. The input lag is gone, and the game finally feels responsive to my fingertips. Last updated onApril 12, 2026 4:13 PM.

I couldn't stand it—this top-tier cooler was letting temps bounce between 75°C and 90°C during the beta's high-load sections, making the CPU frequency totally unstable. The NH-D15S is a beast, but the default silent curve is way too slow to react to instant loads, so heat just piles up between the fins. I first tried locking the fans at 100% via software; the noise was fine, but the temps kept jumping, which was just a frustrating waste of time. I eventually went into the BIOS and set a stepped fan curve that triggers full speed at 75°C, and I bumped up the front case intake to feed it more cold air. In side-by-side tests, the temp swing dropped from 15°C to a tight 4°C - 6°C, and the frame rate finally smoothed out. I did notice some slight fan stuttering at low loads after the change, but raising the startup voltage by 0.1V killed that. CPU temps now sit steady at 72°C - 78°C. Comparing the logs, the input response now feels significantly more snappy. Last updated onApril 16, 2026 5:08 PM.

It's honestly kind of hilarious that this ancient RAM is causing my modern CPU to fluctuate, but here we are. The Kingston FURY DDR3 1866 just hits a bandwidth wall during the chaotic physics of Helldivers 2, leaving the CPU idling for data and causing core temps to swing between 85-92℃, which triggers a slight downclock. I tried dropping the graphics to the absolute minimum, but the game looked like a pixelated mess from 1995, so that was a no-go. I went into the BIOS and bumped the DRAM voltage from 1.5V to 1.6V, and tightened the primary timings from 10-10-10-30 to 9-9-9-28. In AIDA64, the memory latency dropped from 85ns to 76ns, and the frequency jitter completely stopped. I did hit a scare where the RAM temps peaked at 65℃, so I had to zip-tie a tiny 40mm fan directly over the DIMM slots to keep it safe. Now the CPU stays at a steady 76℃ and the system is incredibly stable. I've backed up this config, and the fans are holding steady at 1400-1600RPM. Last updated onApril 23, 2026 1:38 PM.

Back to Top