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

It's honestly a joke that a mainstream board could trigger CPU thermal protection and crash my whole rig during a firefight. The VRM modules on the MSI PRO B760M-A were hitting 102-108℃, causing a 0.1V drop in core voltage that just killed the system. I tried capping the CPU at 125W, but my FPS tanked from 90 to 60, and I refused to accept that kind of performance hit. Instead, I flipped my case fans to a forced exhaust configuration and set the Load-Line Calibration (LLC) to Level 3 in the BIOS. In an OCCT stress test, the VRM peak temp plummeted from 108℃ to 82-88℃, and the crashes stopped completely. I did deal with some annoying case resonance after the fan change, but a few silicone dampeners fixed that. CPU core temps are now steady at 75-82℃. Power parameters backed up in BIOS. Last updated onApril 23, 2026 5:16 PM.

I'm honestly fed up. This new architecture has these tiny scheduling delays with high-res textures, making the FPS jump wildly between 120 and 70. The 9700X's Auto PBO struggles with high-concurrency instructions if RAM latency is too high, causing clocks to bounce between 4.2GHz and 5.3GHz. I tried locking the frequency in software, but it just wasted power and didn't stop the stutters—felt like I was being lied to by the default settings. I went into BIOS, set PBO to 'Enhanced', and tightened my RAM timings from 36-36-36 down to 30-34-34. My 1% Lows jumped from 40 to 62 FPS, and the smoothness is night and day. I did get a few random BSODs at first, but adjusting the voltage offset from -20 to -15 stabilized everything. CPU temps are now 65-75℃. Comparing the frame time graphs, it's finally consistent at 68-72℃. Last updated onApril 22, 2026 5:11 PM.

It's honestly kind of pathetic that a board like this lets the CPU clock fluctuate this much. In the default 'Silent' mode, the fans were capped under 900 RPM, which caused the core to bounce between 82-88°C during high-FPS rendering, triggering some light throttling. I tried capping the game at 120 FPS, but the input lag became noticeable and it felt like playing in mud. I ditched the silent presets, plugged the fans directly into the PWM headers, and set a curve that hits 1600 RPM the moment it touches 75°C. AIDA64 showed the peak temp drop from 88°C to a much safer 70-76°C, and the clock dips stopped. The fans sounded like a jet engine for a second during boot, which scared me, but a smooth start-up curve fixed that. Core temp is now steady at 74°C. I backed up the profile, and VRAM is sitting comfortably at 52-56°C. Last updated onApril 23, 2026 10:04 PM.

It's a joke that an OC card crashes three times an hour in a remake; it was an absolute disaster. The Gigabyte RTX 5060 GAMING OC was running at 2600MHz, but the core voltage would dip by 0.06V during peaks, causing driver checksum errors and an immediate crash. I tried adding 32GB of virtual memory, but that just caused massive stuttering—a total waste of time. I finally opened MSI Afterburner and manually bumped the core voltage from 1.05V to 1.10V, while also sharpening the fan curve to hit 80% at 65°C. After a 12-hour stress test with zero errors, the crashes are gone. The only downside was that the core temp spiked to 78°C initially, but I managed to pull it down to 65°C - 72°C by swapping in a better case exhaust fan. VRAM usage is now stable between 6.8GB - 7.5GB, and the game finally feels solid. Last updated onApril 21, 2026 2:05 PM.

I've had enough. This drive was struggling with the massive asset streaming of a modern engine, leading to slow foliage loading and even some ugly texture popping. If the partitions aren't aligned, the random read performance of the Exceria Pro drops by about 20% under high concurrency, with latency lingering around 110-130ms. I fell for the trap of installing 'disk booster' software, which did nothing but eat up background RAM—it's a total scam. I finally used a partition manager to fix the 4K alignment and flashed the latest official firmware. In my tests, random reads jumped from 35MB/s to 50-60MB/s, and the frequency of those loading hitches dropped by about 65%. I actually had a heart attack when I accidentally deleted a small partition during the process and spent an hour recovering data, but it was worth it. Temps are sitting at 40-48℃, and the read curves are finally looking healthy at 50-60MB/s. Last updated onApril 18, 2026 1:54 PM.

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