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

This cooler is fine for office work, but against a poorly optimized beast like TLOU, it let my temps hit 97℃—absolutely pathetic. My CPU clocks crashed from 4.8GHz to 3.0GHz, turning stealth combat into a slow-motion movie. I tried limiting the processor state to 90%, but I lost 20 FPS, which was a complete waste of time. I eventually ripped it off, applied a high-end 13W/m.K thermal paste, and set the fan curve to hit 100% at 70℃. In Cinebench R23, the peak temps were finally pinned between 84-88℃, and the clock variance dropped to 150MHz. The noise is the real problem now; it sounds like a desk fan on steroids until it drops below 60℃. Even at 90% load, the clocks stay high. I exported the fan parameters from the BIOS for backup, and RAM temps are holding at 58-63℃, but this cooler is barely enough for this game. Last updated onApril 2, 2026 12:03 PM.

It's honestly ridiculous that a game this beautiful can make my motherboard just give up. I was crashing to desktop every ten minutes when entering new zones—an absolute joke of an experience. The Soyo SY-King Dragon H510M VRMs couldn't handle the transient spikes of modern titles, causing the CPU core voltage to fluctuate between 1.15V and 1.08V, leading to calculation errors and CTDs. I tried dropping the graphics to the lowest settings, but that actually increased the crash frequency—totally counterintuitive. I went into the BIOS and manually set the CPU Core Voltage Offset to +0.05V and cranked the system fans to 80% to keep the VRMs from cooking. After 2 hours of AIDA64 FPU stress testing, the system didn't flinch, and voltage ripple was capped at ±0.02V. I hit 97℃ on the CPU during the first attempt, but re-pasting the cooler brought it down to 84℃. VRMs are now 78-84℃. Backed up the profile via the BIOS export tool. Last updated onApril 22, 2026 6:19 PM.

Flying through dense debris fields caused the physics engine to absolutely choke my i5-13490F. The thread scheduler was acting up, pinning some cores at 100% while others just sat there idling. This imbalance tanked my FPS from 60 down to 32. I tried the 'High Performance' power plan in Windows, which made the P-Cores snappier, but the calculation lag was still there—just a band-aid on a bullet wound. I went into the BIOS Advanced Voltage settings, switched Load-Line Calibration from 'Auto' to 'Manual', and bumped the VCCSA from 1.10V to 1.15V. In Cinebench R23, my multi-core score climbed from 18200 to 19100, and temps actually dropped from 85℃ to 78℃. I had a few random reboots at idle right after the tweak, but setting a -0.02V offset finally stabilized everything. CPU temps now sit between 68-75℃. I exported the BIOS config to a backup file so I don't lose this, and fans are steady at 1400-1600RPM. Last updated onApril 28, 2026 8:23 PM.

It's honestly ridiculous that a farming game could make my motherboard give up. Every time I entered a large-scale farm, I'd crash to desktop within ten minutes. The VRM on my Colorful BATTLE-AX B450M-T M.2 V14 just couldn't handle the transient loads of modern games, with the CPU core voltage dipping from 1.12V to 1.06V, causing calculation errors. I tried lowering the graphics to the absolute minimum, but that just increased the frame rate and actually made the crashes happen more often—a total facepalm moment. I went into the BIOS, set a manual CPU core voltage offset of +0.06V, and cranked the motherboard fans to 80% to stop the VRMs from overheating. In an AIDA64 FPU stress test, the system ran for 2 hours without a hitch, with voltage swings kept within +/- 0.02V. My CPU hit 96℃ on the first try, but reapplying thermal paste brought it back down to 82℃. VRM temps stayed at 75-81℃. I used the BIOS export tool to back up these settings. Last updated onMay 9, 2026 5:38 PM.

It's honestly ridiculous that a classic game like this crashes on a modern NVMe setup before even hitting the main menu. System logs showed a 0x0000007B I/O error during the game's random read initialization. I wasted two hours reinstalling the game, which did absolutely nothing—I was beyond annoyed. I finally used the official dashboard to update the firmware and disabled the Low Power Link State in the Windows power plan. After a reboot, the game finally loaded, and the boot time dropped from 45 seconds to a snappy 12 seconds. My system boot was slightly slower by 2 seconds after the update, but I fixed that by tweaking the boot priority in the BIOS. Temps are sitting at 42-48℃, and frame times are now stable at 8.2-11.5ms. I exported the optimized storage parameters via BIOS just to be safe. Last updated onApril 28, 2026 9:27 PM.

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