Trying to run Alan Wake 2 on an entry-level cooler is basically a joke—my PC was just black-screening and rebooting every time the scene changed. The Jonsbo CR-1400E ARGB just couldn't handle a 150W load; the core temp hit 100℃ instantly, triggering a hard shutdown. I tried capping the CPU power to 65W in software, but that just tanked my FPS to 30 and didn't even stop the crashes. I was beyond annoyed. I finally went into the BIOS, hard-locked the max boost clock to 4.2GHz, and set the fans to full blast. In an AIDA64 FPU stress test, it ran for an hour without a single reboot, staying between 85-88℃. I had some annoying fan bearing noise and vibration at first, but re-seating the cooler and tightening the brackets fixed it. CPU now sits at 82-86℃. I exported these conservative settings to a BIOS profile, and the input lag is finally gone. Last updated onApril 6, 2026 2:00 PM.
It's honestly pathetic that a non-brand board crashes this often in a survival game; the compatibility is just a joke. With XMP 3200MHz on, the Jginyue B760M's memory voltage was swinging between 1.32V and 1.38V, causing checksum errors during heavy terrain loads that just crashed the game. I tried disabling Fast Boot in Windows, but that just added 5 seconds to my boot time and the crashes kept happening every two hours—a total waste of time. I finally flashed the latest BIOS and locked the memory voltage at 1.36V, while loosening the tRFC timing by 10 cycles. The system then ran for 10 hours straight without a single crash, with frames staying between 70-90 FPS. I actually pushed the voltage too high at first and the RAM hit 65℃, so I had to add an extra fan to keep it cool. Now the CPU sits at 62℃ - 68℃ with fans at 1600RPM. I've exported these settings to a backup file so I don't have to do this nightmare again. Last updated onApril 5, 2026 4:44 PM.
The default power delivery strategy on this TUF board is a complete disaster; my CPU clock was jumping like an EKG between 3.0GHz and 4.8GHz. These sudden drops caused the game to hitch every few seconds during campaign calculations—it was enough to make me want to throw my monitor. I tried enabling 'Ultimate Performance' in Windows, but that just pushed the VRM temps to 105℃ and triggered a hard throttle—just a rookie mistake. I went into the BIOS, redefined the CPU fan curve to hit 100% at 70℃, and tweaked the PL1 power limit to 125W. In HWInfo, the VRM temps plummeted from 108℃ to a manageable 82℃ - 88℃, and the clock curve finally flattened out. I did hit a Blue Screen of Death initially because my voltage offset was too low, but bumping it by 0.02V fixed it. CPU temps now stay between 75℃ - 82℃. I've exported the BIOS profile to keep these settings saved, and the experience is finally smooth. Last updated onApril 10, 2026 10:44 AM.
It's a joke that a top-tier CPU crashes while running a 2D game; every time the effects peaked, I got a black screen and a reboot. The i7-14700KF was hitting 0.12V drops under transient loads, triggering a 0x124 hardware error. I tried capping the power to 125W via software, but that was useless—it didn't stop the reboots and my minimums dropped from 144 FPS to 80 FPS. I was livid. I finally went into the BIOS, locked the max turbo to 5.2GHz, and added a +0.05V Vcore offset. In an AIDA64 FPU stress test, it ran for 2 hours without a single hiccup, with voltage staying between 1.22-1.28V. I almost fried something early on when temps hit 100℃, but cranking the AIO fan curve to full speed saved me. CPU temps now sit at 75-82℃, and VRMs are at 70-78℃. I exported these stability parameters to a BIOS backup. Power config is finally sorted. Last updated onApril 11, 2026 2:45 PM.
It's honestly ridiculous that I have to spend hours in the BIOS for a new game; the compatibility is a joke. With XMP 6400MHz enabled, the Colorful B760M's voltage was swinging between 1.35-1.40V, leading to checksum errors and crashes during heavy asset loads. I tried dropping the speed to 6000MHz, but I lost about 10 FPS in the 1% lows, which felt like I was wasting my hardware. I eventually manually locked the DRAM voltage at 1.38V and tightened the tRFC timings to stabilize the memory controller. The system finally passed a 12-hour stability test with zero crashes, maintaining 80-100 FPS. I did hit 62℃ on the RAM sticks initially, so I had to add a dedicated memory fan to keep it cool. CPU temps are 62-68℃ with fans at 1500 RPM. I exported the profile, and now the controls feel tight and responsive. Last updated onApril 13, 2026 3:37 PM.