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Fighting these complex mechanical enemies, I kept an eye on CPU usage and noticed that even with low load, frame times were jumping between 16ms - 32ms. The 9950X3D's massive cache is a beast, but Atomic Heart's instruction set causes threads to bounce between the two CCDs, which feels like a micro-stutter. I tried enabling forced sync in the emulator settings, but that pushed input lag up to 20ms—it felt sluggish, so I ditched that immediately. I updated the BIOS to the latest version and used a process affinity tool to lock the game's main thread to the cores with the 3D V-Cache. The frame time analyzer showed the jitter narrowed down to a tight 16ms - 18ms range, and the game feels silky again. I did have a brief system hang when I first locked the cores, but it went away after I reassigned the background service threads. CPU is at 55℃ - 62℃ and RAM is 40℃ - 45℃. Internal benchmarks confirm everything is verified. Last updated onApril 29, 2026 9:22 PM.

Entering the crowded city streets, I kept an eye on the disk activity and noticed that while bandwidth wasn't maxed, response times were jumping randomly between 16 - 35ms. The Kioxia Exceria Pro controller has a slight clock sync deviation when paired with certain PCIe 4.0 motherboard links, which manifests as these micro-hitches. I tried disabling Fast Startup first, but the instability remained, and I quickly gave up on that. I updated the firmware to the latest version and turned off the Link State Power Management in Windows, locking the disk power plan to High Performance. In RTSS, the frame time variance narrowed down to a tight 14 - 17ms range, and the gameplay felt fluid again. I did have a brief recognition lag at boot after the firmware flash, but a clean driver reinstall sorted it. Drive is running at 40 - 48℃. Everything is verified and stable. Last updated onApril 24, 2026 6:12 PM.

During critical story beats, I noticed my frame times were jumping randomly between 16-30ms, even though CPU usage was low. The 6000MHz clock on the Gloway Celestial Strategy Yi was causing slight synchronization offsets with my motherboard's memory controller. I first tried NVIDIA's Low Latency mode, but that actually increased the stutter frequency by about 5%, which was incredibly frustrating. I decided to downclock the RAM slightly to 5800MHz and bumped the voltage from 1.35V to 1.38V to stabilize the signal. Using RTSS, I saw the fluctuation shrink to a tight 14-17ms window, and the game felt silky smooth again. I did run into a slow boot issue after the downclock because the timings were out of sync, but manually setting tCL to 36 sorted it out. RAM temps are now 42-48℃ and VRM temps are around 55-60℃. It's a small sacrifice in speed for a much better experience. Last updated onApril 2, 2026 2:12 PM.

Cruising at 300 km/h, I noticed that while CPU usage looked fine, the frame times were jumping erratically between 16-32ms. The memory controller on the Jginyue X99M-PLUS D4 was having a hard time with modern instruction sets, creating these tiny synchronization delays that felt like micro-stutters. I tried the in-game 'Low Latency' mode, but that just pushed input lag up to 25ms, which felt like driving on ice. I ended up updating the BIOS to the latest version, disabled C-States entirely, and locked the RAM at 2133MHz with auto-tuning off. The frame time analyzer finally showed a tight 16-20ms window, and the steering felt snappy again. Disabling C-States did bump my idle temps by 8℃, but a quick fan curve tweak fixed that. CPU is now 58-65℃ and RAM is 42-48℃. The internal benchmark confirms everything is validated, though RAM temps occasionally hit 58-63℃. Last updated onApril 29, 2026 2:46 PM.

While running high-precision emulation, I noticed that even though CPU load was low, the frame times were jumping wildly between 16-32ms. The DDR4 memory controller on the MSI PRO B760M-A was hitting some weird sync delays with the emulator's specific instruction sets, creating a noticeable stutter. I tried forcing sync in the emulator settings, but the input lag climbed to 20ms, which felt sluggish and unresponsive. I ended up updating the BIOS to the latest version and disabling C-State power savings, locking the memory at 3200MHz with auto-frequency scaling turned off. In the frame time analyzer, the variance shrunk to a tight 16-18ms range, and the controls felt snappy again. Disabling C-State did bump my idle CPU temps by 10℃, but a custom fan curve fixed that. CPU is now 55-62℃ and memory is 40-45℃. Internal benchmarks confirm the fix, with CPU staying at 56-61℃. Last updated onMay 4, 2026 3:44 PM.

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