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It's actually insane that Cities Skylines II can push a motherboard's VRM to 102℃; it's basically a stress test for your cooling. This overheating caused the CPU to tank from 4.2GHz down to 0.9GHz, turning the game into a slideshow before the whole system just rebooted. I tried jamming two 12cm fans in my case to blast the board, but that only dropped temps by 8℃—still crashed under load. It was a total band-aid solution. I eventually went into the BIOS, capped the long-term power limit (PL1) at 85W, and killed all auto-boost settings to force a lower, stable clock. HWiNFO showed the VRM finally settling between 80-88℃. I lost about 12% performance, but at least I can actually play for 5 hours straight. I tried 65W first, but the simulation speed was painfully slow. Now, CPU temps are 68-75℃ and the board is at 82℃. I exported the BIOS profile so I don't have to do this again, and the response time is finally crisp. Last updated onMay 8, 2026 10:21 AM.

It's honestly ridiculous trying to run a flight sim on this entry-level board; the VRM temps hit 105℃, which is just insane. This caused the CPU to tank from 4.4GHz down to 0.8GHz, turning the game into a slideshow before the whole system just rebooted. I first tried jamming three 12cm fans into the case to blast the motherboard, but that only dropped temps by 10℃ and didn't stop the crashes—totally amateur move. I eventually went into the BIOS and capped the long-term CPU power (PL1) at 65W and disabled all auto-boost options to keep the clock stable. HWInfo showed VRM temps finally settling between 85-92℃. I lost about 15% performance, but at least I can actually finish a flight now. I tried capping it at 45W once, but the loading times were agonizing, so I bumped it back to 65W. CPU is 70-78℃, motherboard is 88℃. Exported the power config, and fans are steady at 1200-1400 RPM. Last updated onMay 10, 2026 7:03 PM.

It's honestly ridiculous—I bought a top-tier 5090 and I'm still seeing frame drops at 8K. It felt like a slap in the face. The 24GB of GDDR7 on the Manli RTX 5090 D v2 has insane bandwidth, but due to some driver scheduling nonsense, the VRAM usage was hovering at 22-23.8GB, causing constant resource swapping. I tried dropping the textures to 'High', but the loss in detail was obvious and I hated it. I eventually used NVIDIA Profile Inspector to force a VRAM pre-allocation mode and tweaked the system page file write speed. Checking GPU-Z, the memory clock stayed locked at 28Gbps, and the drops went from three times a minute to basically zero. I actually tried an extreme overclock that caused some slight chromatic aberration, so I had to dial the core clock back by 50MHz to get it clean. Temps are 62-68℃ with fans at 1600 RPM. I've exported the profile so I never have to deal with this again. Last updated onMay 11, 2026 10:56 AM.

This is ridiculous—it's a stealth game, but my CPU was doing a marathon in the background, with one core hitting 96℃ while the others sat at 60℃. This massive imbalance caused my clock speeds to bounce between 3.2GHz and 4.8GHz, making every movement feel choppy. I tried capping the all-core frequency, but that cost me 20% performance, which is just a waste of hardware. I ripped the cooler off and found a tiny air gap on the base. I reapplied high-performance paste and used a cross-pattern tightening method to ensure even pressure. HWInfo showed the core delta drop from 30℃ to a tight 8-12℃, and FPS finally locked around 110. I actually snapped a plastic clip during the second install, which was a total pain, but the spare part fixed it. Full load temps are now 72-78℃ at 1400 RPM. Exported the BIOS fan profile, and the game finally feels responsive. Last updated onMay 11, 2026 5:25 PM.

It's honestly ridiculous that Hitman 3 can push a motherboard's power delivery to 100℃. The overheat was so bad that my CPU clock would tank from 4.0GHz to 0.8GHz instantly, turning the game into a slideshow before the whole rig just rebooted. It was a total joke. I started by jamming extra fans in the case to blow on the VRMs, but that only dropped the temp by 5℃ and didn't stop the crashes—totally amateur move. I went into the BIOS and capped the long-term power limit (PL1) to 65W and disabled all auto-boost features to force a lower, stable clock. HWInfo showed VRM temps finally settling between 82℃ - 88℃. I lost about 15% performance, but at least it doesn't crash anymore. I tried capping it at 45W once, but the loading screens took an eternity, so 65W is the compromise. CPU is now 65℃ - 72℃ and the board is at 85℃. Exported the power config to a backup file. Last updated onMay 8, 2026 10:38 AM.

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