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

It's honestly ridiculous that an RP mod can push a CPU to 98℃; the thermal pressure was just insane. The AK620 struggled with the all-core load, and the motherboard kept triggering the thermal shutdown, which made the trial-and-error process a total slog. I tried leaving the case side panel open, which only dropped the temp by 4 degrees and didn't stop the crashes every two hours—a complete joke of a solution. I finally went into the BIOS and capped the max CPU power from 'Auto' to 125W, while setting the fan curve to hit 100% at 60℃. In stability tests, the CPU finally settled between 76-82℃, and I ran the game for 12 hours straight without a single crash. I actually set the limit too low at first and my FPS tanked to 50, so I bumped it to 150W to find the balance between heat and speed. Core voltage is now 1.18-1.24V with fans at 1800 RPM. I exported these settings to a config file, and the game finally feels responsive again. Last updated onMarch 31, 2026 3:51 PM.

This 500GB FireCuda 530 is the definition of storage anxiety. After installing a few AAA titles, my free space dropped below 10%, and the write amplification became brutal. In Where Winds Meet, whenever the game tried to write temporary cache, my FPS would tank from 90 down to 40—it was honestly unplayable. I tried the built-in Windows Disk Cleanup, but it only found 2GB of junk, which did absolutely nothing. I ended up using a third-party tool to deep-clean all shader caches and manually moved the virtual memory to a secondary drive to stop the I/O hammering on the main SSD. In the latency analyzer, disk response times stopped swinging between 30-100ms and settled at 10-20ms. I almost bricked my boot sequence when moving the pagefile, but fixing the BCD entries got me back in. Temps are 45-52℃ and speeds are back to a stable 5000MB/s. Backed up the image now that it's finally stable. Last updated onApril 8, 2026 12:28 PM.

Using this ancient H310 board for the God of War DLC is basically a joke; it black-screened every time a big ability triggered. The VRM on the Galax H310M Warrior D4 had a voltage drop of 0.15V when the CPU boosted to 4.0GHz, causing an instant crash. I tried limiting the CPU power to 65W via software, but the FPS tanked to 20 and it still rebooted. I was beyond annoyed. I went into the BIOS, hard-locked the max boost to 3.6GHz, and added a +0.05V Vcore offset. In AIDA64 FPU stress tests, it ran for an hour without a single reboot, with voltage holding steady at 1.12-1.18V. The VRM hit 95℃ at first, so I had to zip-tie a 4cm fan over the power phase. CPU is now 78-85℃ and VRMs are 72-78℃. Saved these conservative settings to the BIOS profile. Last updated onMarch 31, 2026 3:25 PM.

It's absolutely ridiculous—I bought a top-tier PCIe 5.0 drive and it crashes more than my old Gen3 disk. The Fanxiang S910Max has these random I/O checksum errors when shaking hands with some Gen5 motherboard links, leading to full kernel crashes. The trial-and-error process was pure torture. I tried disabling Fast Boot in Windows, but that just added 5 seconds to my boot time and the crashes still happened every two hours—a total waste of time. I finally updated to the latest BIOS and manually locked the PCIe link to Gen4 mode. I sacrificed some peak speed for absolute stability. In a 24-hour stability test, I had zero crashes. Reads dropped to 7000MB/s, but it's a thousand times better than a crashing PC. I almost bricked it at first by setting a wrong voltage offset, but resetting to defaults fixed it. Temps are now 48-55℃, and the heatsink is doing its job. Exported the config, and everything is stable at 48-55℃. Last updated onApril 11, 2026 10:17 PM.

Corsair's RGB driver is a total performance killer. Every time my mech boosted, my frame times would jump from 8ms to 40ms—it was honestly infuriating. Background analysis showed that the iCUE service was constantly polling the memory SPD, hogging the bus and making my latency swing between 70-110ns. I tried turning off the dynamic lighting effects in the app, but as long as the driver was running, the resource hogging continued—such a garbage design. I eventually just nuked the iCUE core service in the Service Manager and manually tightened the timings in BIOS from 32-39-39-76 down to 30-36-36-72. In RTSS, the frame time spikes vanished instantly, locking in at a perfect 8-12ms. I actually hit some severe read/write errors when I first tightened the timings, but bumping the voltage from 1.35V to 1.40V stabilized everything. RAM temps are 58-65℃ with fans at 1800 RPM. I backed up the BIOS profile, and the optimization is finally saved. Last updated onMarch 30, 2026 6:05 PM.

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