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The moment I stepped into the main city, my FPS tanked from 60 to 20. The optimization is just abysmal, and it's honestly depressing. The default timings on the Onda 9D4-DVH are way too conservative, leaving bandwidth stuck between 32-36GB/s, which can't handle the asset streaming. I tried closing every background app, but I only gained 2 FPS—a total waste of time. I went into BIOS, forced the RAM from 2666MHz to 3000MHz, and crushed the timings from 18-22-22-42 down to 16-18-18-38. 3DMark CPU scores jumped by 12%, and my city lows went from 18 to 32 FPS. I crashed twice during save loads at first, but bumping the voltage from 1.2V to 1.35V fixed it. Board temps are 45-52℃ and RAM is 42-48℃. I backed up the config, but this board is definitely pushing its limits. Last updated onMarch 23, 2026 7:52 PM.

This is just wild—I bought a thermoelectric cooler and my CPU temps dropped below 10℃, but it introduced these weird system micro-stutters. The side effect of extreme cooling is a joke. The TEC module in the Cooler Master ML360 SUB-ZERO was pulling so much current that it caused a 0.05V transient drop in the motherboard VRMs, which absolutely killed the stability. I tried locking the TEC power to 100%, but that just made the stuttering worse. Chasing the lowest possible temperature became my biggest obstacle. I eventually switched to 'Smart' mode and set the target temp to around 25℃, while cranking the radiator fans to 1800 RPM to dump the heat faster. HWInfo showed core temps stabilizing at 32℃ - 38℃, and voltage swings narrowed to 1.25V - 1.28V. I actually forgot to check for condensation and found tiny water droplets on the edge of my motherboard—nearly had a heart attack. I had to shut everything down and dry it with a hairdryer. Lesson learned. TEC power draw now sits at 180W - 210W, and fans are steady at 1800RPM. It's a beast of a cooler, but you have to be careful or it'll kill your board. Last updated onApril 11, 2026 2:48 PM.

Facing a 30-second black screen every time I start the game is absolute torture; it completely kills the excitement of playing. The BIOS on the Jginyue B760M GAMING D4 has some terrible UEFI compatibility lag, which was blocking SSD read commands for 120-180ms during the boot phase. I tried disabling all startup apps in Windows, but that only shaved off 2 seconds—a total joke of a fix. I eventually went into the BIOS, killed CSM compatibility mode, forced the boot priority to Windows Boot Manager, and turned on Fast Boot. Using a boot timer, the time from power-on to the loading screen dropped from 45 seconds to 18 seconds. I actually lost access to my old HDD after disabling CSM because it was MBR, so I had to convert the whole drive to GPT to get my files back. Board idle temps are 42-48℃ and the SSD is at 35-42℃. Saved all the tweaks via the BIOS export tool. It's a budget board, so these tweaks are mandatory. Last updated onApril 7, 2026 5:37 PM.

I'm honestly speechless. I bought this top-tier VastArmor Radeon RX 9070 XT Super Alloy, and it crashes to desktop every two laps in the rain. A total disaster. I noticed VRAM was between 14.2 - 15.8GB, but the GPU clock was fluctuating wildly; the driver was clearly choking on the rain particle effects, causing a memory access conflict. I tried the latest Beta drivers, but that just made it worse—I even got a couple of Blue Screens. Total waste of time. I decided to roll back to the last known stable driver version and killed every single third-party overlay running in the background. After that, the crashes (which happened every 15 minutes) completely vanished, and FPS stabilized between 110 - 125. I did lose some of the new driver's performance boosts, but after tweaking the shader cache, I got most of it back. Temps are a steady 60 - 66℃ with fans at 1300 RPM. I've backed up all registry settings now so I never have to deal with this crash loop again. Last updated onApril 1, 2026 8:53 PM.

In the middle of a crowded city, my FPS would suddenly tank from 90 down to 30—it was enough to make me want to smash my keyboard. HWInfo showed the Corsair Vengeance LPX frequency was swinging wildly between 2133MHz - 3200MHz, clearly some annoying motherboard power-saving feature. I tried enabling 'High Performance' in Windows power options, but the frequency still fluctuated; surface-level tweaks are useless against BIOS-level hardware behavior. I went into the BIOS, changed the memory frequency from Auto to a manual lock of 3200MHz, and nuked all C-State power savings, while nudging the SoC voltage to 1.1V. Under stress tests, the frequency finally stayed dead-locked at 3200MHz, and the FPS variance tightened to 82 - 88 FPS. My CPU temp jumped by 5℃ after the lock, so I had to adjust my fan curves to keep it cool. RAM temps are 44℃ - 50℃ at 1.35V. After backing up the BIOS profile, frame times are finally stable at 5.1ms - 6.4ms. Last updated onMarch 30, 2026 9:50 AM.

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