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

While trekking through dense jungle areas, my CPU would hit 92℃ and the game would just freeze for a split second—classic thermal throttling. The PCcooler RT620P fans were idling too low below 80℃, and my case was basically a sauna, trapping all the heat inside. I tried limiting the CPU power limit (PL1) to 125W, but while that dropped temps by 6 degrees, my minimums fell from 55 FPS to 42 FPS, which was a pretty disappointing trade-off. I eventually flipped my front case fans to a high-pressure intake and set the RT620P curve to hit 90% speed at 70℃. HWiNFO showed my cores dropping from 92-96℃ down to 75-81℃, and my FPS settled into a tight 62-68 range. I had some annoying resonance noise after the airflow change, but shifting the fan mounts slightly killed the vibration. VRM temps are now 62-68℃. After two hours of stress testing, the throttling is officially dead. Last updated onApril 18, 2026 4:08 PM.

Riding fast through the landscape, I kept seeing these horizontal breaks across the screen, making precise combat almost impossible. The Zhitai TiPro9000's low-level data handling was hitting sync clock offsets during high-frequency resource streams, causing the refresh rate to wobble between 132-144Hz. I tried forcing Fullscreen Optimizations in the GPU panel, but that actually made the tearing worse and added flickering—a total backfire. I went into the BIOS, disabled the internal graphics output, and forced the PCIe link to the maximum power efficiency state. In RTSS, the frame time variance tightened from a messy 7-14ms to a rock-steady 6.8-7.1ms. The first time I turned on V-Sync, the input lag was unbearable, so I switched to Fast Sync to get that responsiveness back. Motherboard temps are a cool 40-45℃. The tearing is completely gone, and the controls finally feel snappy and responsive. Parameters verified. Last updated onApril 19, 2026 4:16 PM.

Whenever I'm warping through space, these annoying horizontal tears appear right in the middle of the screen, making precise flight almost impossible. The Zhitai TiPro9000's underlying data handling was hitting some sync clock offsets at high frequencies, causing the refresh rate to wobble between 135-144Hz. I tried forcing full-screen optimizations in the GPU panel, but that actually made the tearing worse and added some weird flickering. I eventually went into the BIOS, disabled the integrated graphics output, and forced the PCIe link to its maximum power efficiency state. RTSS showed my frame times tighten from a messy 8-16ms range to a clean 7.1-7.4ms. I did notice a huge spike in input lag when I first tried V-Sync, but switching to Fast Sync solved that. Motherboard temps are stable at 40-45℃. The tearing is completely gone now, and the 7.1-7.4ms frame time is rock solid. Last updated onApril 23, 2026 8:11 PM.

Whenever I flicked my view quickly, I'd see these obvious horizontal tears across the screen, making precise aiming a total nightmare. The G.Skill Trident Z DDR4 3600 was having slight clock sync offsets when handling high-frequency signals, causing the refresh rate to wobble between 138-144Hz. I tried forcing full-screen optimizations in the NVIDIA panel, but that actually made the tearing worse and added some weird flickering—a total fail. I went into the BIOS, disabled the internal graphics output, and forced the PCIe link to its maximum power state. Using RTSS, I saw frame times tighten from a shaky 8-15ms to a rock-solid 7.2-7.5ms. I initially turned on V-Sync, but the input lag was unbearable until I switched to Fast Sync. The motherboard stays cool at 42-47℃ with the fans barely spinning. After side-by-side tests, the tearing is completely gone and the 7.2-7.5ms frame time is perfectly stable. Last updated onMay 4, 2026 8:42 PM.

Whenever I flicked my view, I'd see these obvious horizontal tears across the screen, making precise headshots nearly impossible. The Biostar H310MHD3's internal video output was having sync clock offsets at high frequencies, causing the refresh rate to wobble between 140-144Hz. I tried forcing 'Disable Fullscreen Optimizations' in Windows, but that actually made the tearing worse and added some weird flickering—just great. I went into the BIOS, disabled the onboard graphics entirely, and forced the PCIe link to its maximum power state. In RTSS, my frame times tightened from a jittery 6-12ms to a rock-solid 6.9-7.1ms. I noticed a huge spike in input lag when I first turned on V-Sync, but switching to 'Fast Sync' solved that immediately. The board stays cool at 40°C - 45°C with the fans barely spinning. Tearing is completely gone, and the 6.9-7.1ms frame time is consistent. Last updated onApril 30, 2026 10:08 PM.

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