In the middle of a fight, 8GB is just not enough. I was getting 0.3s freezes every few seconds, which is a death sentence in Nioh. The Kingston FURY 2400 is stable, but the lack of capacity forces the system to rely on slow disk swapping. I tried dropping all textures to Low, but the game looked like a pixelated mess and the stutters stayed. I ended up tweaking the Windows memory compression algorithm via the registry and locked the page file at 12GB on my fastest NVMe partition. In Resource Monitor, hard page faults dropped from 12 per second to just 3-5, making the combat feel way smoother. I had some weird boot lag after the registry edit, but two restarts and a cache clear fixed it. RAM temps are 40-46℃ and CPU load is 80-88%. 1% Lows are finally stable, with RAM heat staying around 42-46℃. Last updated onMay 2, 2026 12:47 PM.
Flying across the planet surface was interrupted by these tiny, annoying hitches that ruin the immersion of an open world. The 6400MHz speed on the G.Skill Trident Z Neo was causing SoC voltage drops on my board, leading to random spikes of 12-28ms latency. I tried updating the BIOS first, which helped with some bugs, but the micro-stutters were still there, making me really paranoid. I went into the BIOS and locked the SoC voltage at 1.25V and tweaked the primary timings to 32-39-39-102. AIDA64 showed latency stabilize from 65-82ns down to 62-66ns. My CPU temp climbed by 3℃ initially, but I fixed that by adjusting the PBO curve. RAM temps are around 52-58℃. The latency is gone and the parameters are verified. Last updated onApril 27, 2026 9:37 PM.
Fighting through the streets of Tokyo is intense, but every time I flicked the camera, I'd get these unsettling micro-stutters that completely broke the immersion. The fan response on the Maxsun MS-Terminator B850M WIFI had about a 2-second delay between 70℃ and 80℃, which let the CPU temp overshoot to 92℃ and trigger a clock drop. I tried lowering the settings to Medium, but while the FPS went up, the temp spikes stayed—it was clear that the settings weren't the problem, the fan curve was. I went into the BIOS and slashed the fan response time from 3 seconds down to 0.1 seconds and capped the CPU power at 125W. HWInfo showed the peak temps drop from 92℃ to a range of 80-84℃, and the lagging got way better. At first, the fans were ramping up and down constantly, which was annoying, but adding a 5℃ hysteresis window smoothed it out. Now the CPU stays between 75-81℃ and the fans are steady at 1400-1600 RPM. Performance logs show the clocks are finally stable at 68-74℃. Last updated onMay 7, 2026 12:32 PM.
Whenever I cast big area-of-effect spells, the game would have these tiny, annoying hitches that are absolutely lethal in an RPG. The memory controller on the Biostar B650MT was acting up with the EXPO profile enabled, and the SoC voltage was bouncing between 1.1V and 1.2V, causing random 15-30ms latency spikes. I tried closing every single background app in Windows, but that only helped by maybe 1%, which made me realize this was a hardware-level issue. I went into the BIOS, manually locked the SoC voltage at 1.25V, and dropped the RAM frequency to 5600MHz just to be safe. RTSS showed the frame intervals tighten from a wild 12-35ms to a stable 9-14ms. My CPU temp climbed by about 3 degrees after the voltage lock, so I had to tweak the PBO curve to bring it back down. The motherboard is running at 48-55℃. Comparison tests prove the memory latency is gone, and the board is still at 48-55℃. Last updated onApril 17, 2026 9:17 AM.
Zipping through Manhattan is great until the camera rotates quickly and you hit these unsettling micro-stutters. The Zotac RTX 5060 Ti 8GB has a weird 2-second lag in fan response between 70℃ and 80℃, which lets the core overshoot to 88℃ and trigger a clock drop. I tried lowering the graphics to Medium, but while the FPS went up, the temperature swings were still wild—clearly not the real fix. I used a utility to force the fan response time down to 0.1 seconds and applied a -0.02V core voltage offset to cut the heat. HWInfo showed the peaks dropping from 88℃ to 76-81℃, and the stuttering mostly vanished. The fans were jumping around too much at first, but adding a 4℃ hysteresis interval smoothed it out. Now it stays at 72-78℃ with fans at 1500-1700 RPM. The performance analyzer confirms the clocks are stable, and VRAM temps are holding at 58-63℃. Last updated onMay 5, 2026 1:27 PM.