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

It's unbelievable that a top-tier dual-tower cooler could just fold under UE5's rendering load; I was halfway through a render and the whole PC just black-screened. The PA120 V3's default fan curve was way too conservative, letting the CPU temp rocket from 50℃ to 102℃ in 30 seconds, triggering the motherboard's emergency shutdown. I tried switching to a high-performance power plan, but that just made it worse—the crash happened in 15 seconds. Total disaster. I went into the BIOS and set a much more aggressive stepped fan curve, and I actually took the cooler off and re-tightened the screws in a cross-pattern to ensure the mounting pressure was even. HWInfo showed the peak temp dropped from 102℃ to 88 - 92℃, and the render finally finished. I noticed one fan making a weird rattling noise after the reinstall, but it was just a cable rubbing against the frame. Power draw is steady at 210 - 230 Watts with fans hitting 1500 - 1800 RPM. I saved the fan profile so I can restore it after any BIOS update. The system response is now snappy. Last updated onMarch 29, 2026 7:44 PM.

Trying to run a modern masterpiece on a Z370 relic is like trying to drive a horse carriage on a highway—absolutely ridiculous. With high settings, the single-core load just hits a wall, causing the clock to bounce between 3.8GHz and 4.5GHz, and my FPS tanks from 60 down to 30. I tried disabling every single background app in Windows, but that only gave me a 5% stability bump and the drops were still frequent. Total waste of time. I eventually went into the BIOS, enabled a mild overclock, bumped the core voltage from 1.2V to 1.25V, and used a process manager to set the game thread priority to 'Realtime'. In comparison tests, the 1% lows jumped from 28 FPS to 45 FPS, making the combat feel way more fluid. I almost fried my CPU because my old cooler was dried out—temps hit 95℃ instantly until I repasted it. Now it holds at 78-84℃. I've backed up the voltage and scheduling parameters, and memory temps are staying around 58-63℃. It's a struggle, but it works. Last updated onMarch 7, 2026 12:48 PM.

During huge boss fights, I was getting these millisecond hitches that were just infuriating. The Valkyrie V360 MIST pump was in Auto mode, and the RPM was bouncing between 2000 - 3000, which caused the CPU temps to swing from 70℃ to 85℃. This kept triggering the boost clock to toggle on and off, causing the lag. I tried the High Performance power plan, but that was useless—it didn't stop the temp swings and actually pushed the peak temp up by 2℃. I finally opened the AIO control software and locked the pump speed at a constant 2800 RPM, then synced the radiator fans to a linear CPU temp curve. Core temps stabilized between 65℃ - 72℃, and the frame times tightened up from a messy 12-25ms to a clean 8-11ms. I did deal with some annoying high-frequency resonance after locking the pump, but changing the radiator orientation fixed it. Everything is rock solid now. Backed up the pump and fan config via a system snapshot. Last updated onApril 5, 2026 10:08 AM.

The memory compatibility on this board is a joke. With EXPO on, every reboot takes three minutes for memory training, and once I'm in-game, my FPS tanks from 90 to 40. It feels like the BIOS optimization was just an afterthought. I tried an XMP compatibility mode, but the system wouldn't even post—total disaster. I finally went manual: bumped memory voltage from 1.25V to 1.38V, locked SoC voltage at 1.2V, and slightly dropped the frequency to 5600MHz. In RTSS, my 1% lows jumped from 38 FPS to 62 FPS, with a tiny 5-10 FPS variance. The catch was that memory temps hit 65℃, so I had to rig up a small fan over the DIMMs to cool them down. CPU temps are fine at 75-82℃. I exported my profile so I don't have to do this again after a BIOS update, and the input response finally feels snappy. Last updated onApril 5, 2026 10:05 AM.

This drive has a decent heatsink, but the SLC cache exhaustion is a joke when handling fragmented assets. During complex Fortnite scenes, write speeds plummeted from 6000MB/s to 1200MB/s, causing the loading screen to stutter. I tried using disk cleanup tools, but that just made the system indexing take longer—a total waste of time. I used a third-party tool to shrink the partition, leaving 150GB of unallocated space to expand the dynamic cache pool, and disabled write-cache flushing in Device Manager. CrystalDiskMark showed random write performance jump from 30MB/s to 55MB/s. I noticed some old saves loaded slowly after the partition change, but a full TRIM command fixed it. Temps stay between 42-55℃, though the dynamic cache still feels a bit unpredictable. Last updated onMarch 23, 2026 10:20 PM.

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