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

It's honestly ridiculous that an anime action game could make my B760M throttle. The default mounting pressure on my ASUS TUF GAMING B760M-PLUS D4 had slightly warped over time, leaving cores 1 and 2 about 11-14℃ hotter than the rest, triggering local throttling. I tried cranking the fans to 2000RPM, but it just turned my room into a wind tunnel without actually dropping the temps—a total waste of electricity. I ended up stripping the cooler and replacing the mounting screws with higher-tension springs, while also syncing the fan order to clear the radiator airflow. In Cinebench, the core temp spread went from 66-84℃ to a uniform 62-68℃, and my minimum FPS jumped from 110 to 160. I actually bent the PCB slightly when I first tightened the screws, but adding a support spacer fixed it. CPU power draw stayed at 85-92W with noise at 34dB. I exported these pressure settings to a BIOS profile, and core temps are now locked at 62-68℃. Last updated onApril 6, 2026 2:35 PM.

It's honestly pathetic that an ARGB cooler lets a CPU hit 92℃ under a mere 120W load. The Jonsbo CR-1400E's heat pipe efficiency just tanks after an hour of gaming, leaving temps hovering between 88-96℃ and triggering brutal frequency drops. I tried leaving the side panel open, which dropped temps by 4℃, but the dust buildup and noise were unacceptable. I went into the BIOS and forced a hyper-aggressive fan curve and reapplied high-conductivity silver paste. HWInfo stress tests showed the peak temp drop from 96℃ to 80-85℃, and the clock speeds finally stopped crashing. I had a nightmare with the first paste application where I left a hot spot because it wasn't spread evenly, but a plastic spreader fixed it. Fans now run at 1700 RPM—it's loud, but at least it doesn't throttle. Saved the optimized curve as a system snapshot. Last updated onApril 10, 2026 6:48 PM.

It's honestly pathetic—my hardware meets the specs, but walking through the world feels like I'm running the game off an old 5400RPM hard drive. The old BIOS on the Soyo SY-King Dragon H510M was having a total meltdown with the new DirectX 12 instruction sets, causing memory addressing conflicts that made frame times jump between 10ms and 140ms. I tried disabling all overlays in software, but that just caused the game to crash to desktop—a truly frustrating trial-and-error process. I finally flashed the latest official BIOS and manually enabled memory remapping, while switching the power plan to High Performance. In RTSS, the wild 10-140ms swings collapsed into a stable 18-28ms range, and the stutters are gone. I did have a moment of panic when the BIOS reset my RAM to 2133MHz, but re-enabling XMP fixed the performance. CPU temps are 72-78℃ and VRM is 65-70℃. I backed up the BIOS settings just in case, but the system is finally stable, though the update process was a nerve-wracking experience. Last updated onApril 10, 2026 4:59 PM.

It's honestly ridiculous that a top-tier X870 board would let my RAM max out and cause frame drops during map loads. The ASUS ROG STRIX X870-A Snow Edition was struggling with massive amounts of dynamic NPC data, with usage spiking over 94%, forcing the system to lean on slow virtual memory and tanking my FPS from 110 down to 35. I tried disabling some environmental details, but the world looked empty and lifeless—totally not worth it for the hardware I paid for. I manually set the system page file to a fixed 64GB and enabled High Performance memory mode in the BIOS. AIDA64 stress tests showed memory latency drop from 115ns to a tight 80-88ns, and the stutters mostly disappeared. I actually caused an I/O conflict by setting the page file too large at first, but moving it to a dedicated NVMe partition fixed the hitching. RAM temps stayed between 48-55℃. I backed up these optimization parameters, and the temps remain stable at 48-55℃, though the setup took forever. Last updated onApril 8, 2026 12:38 PM.

The moment I entered the underwater city, my FPS plummeted from 80 to 20. The optimization in this game is just abysmal. Even with the high bandwidth of the Asgard Thor DDR5 6400, the driver-level I/O scheduling was lagging between 30-50ms, which killed the streaming loads. I tried killing all background apps, but I only gained 2 FPS—a complete joke. I ended up expanding the virtual memory to 32GB on my NVMe drive and pushed the RAM to 6600MHz in the BIOS. In 3DMark's CPU test, my 1% lows went from 12 FPS up to 32 FPS. I did have a hard freeze on the first run, but bumping the voltage from 1.40V to 1.45V stabilized it. RAM is at 48-54℃ and the board is 52-58℃. I've backed up the config, but the game still feels like a mess. Last updated onApril 3, 2026 2:44 PM.

Back to Top