Every time I launched the game, the loading bar would just freeze at 85% for twenty seconds. It was an agonizing wait. Using a disk analyzer, I found the Galax B760M D4's M.2 slot was choking on small random files, with speeds swinging wildly between 15MB/s and 450MB/s. I tried disabling Fast Startup in Windows, but that actually added 8 seconds to the boot and didn't fix the hang—total dead end. I grabbed the latest BIOS patch from the official site, flashed it, and enabled the NVMe Fast Boot protocol. According to the boot logs, the resource load time dropped from 42s to 13s, and the freezing stopped completely. I almost bricked it because the CMOS battery was dying and I lost my settings, but a new battery solved that. SSD temps are 38-45℃. The boot sequence is finally optimized. Last updated onMay 7, 2026 5:56 PM.
During massive skill clashes, the game would just hitch for a split second, and it's incredibly noticeable on a 144Hz monitor. Monitoring showed the RAM on the Soyo SY-A320D4+ was bouncing between 2133MHz - 2666MHz, causing CPU cache hit latency to swing between 18ms - 35ms. I tried the 'High Performance' power plan in Windows, but while temps went up by 3℃, the stuttering stayed—a reminder that software tweaks can't fix hardware bottlenecks. I went into the BIOS, manually locked the memory frequency at 2400MHz, and set the primary timings to 16-18-18-36. In RivaTuner, the frame time variance tightened from 15ms - 32ms down to 12ms - 18ms. I actually tried XMP 2666 before this, but the system just kept rebooting randomly until I backed it down to 2400MHz. RAM temps are sitting at 38℃ - 45℃. Ran a final benchmark to verify the stability, and the parameters are now verified. Last updated onApril 30, 2026 2:19 PM.
Every time I launched the game, the loading bar would just hang at 90% for twenty seconds, which is an agonizing way to start a session. Using a disk analyzer, I found the M.2 slot on my ASUS B760M-PLUS was hitting severe I/O queue congestion, with read speeds swinging wildly between 10MB/s and 400MB/s. I tried disabling Windows Fast Startup, but that actually added 10 seconds to the boot time and didn't stop the freeze—I knew then it was a firmware issue. I grabbed the latest BIOS from the official site, flashed it, and enabled the NVMe Fast Boot protocol in the UEFI. The boot logs showed resource loading dropping from 40 seconds to 12 seconds. I almost bricked the board when the power flickered during the flash, and I had to pull the CMOS battery to get it back, but it worked. SSD temps are now a cool 35-42℃. The whole boot flow is finally streamlined. Last updated onMay 9, 2026 6:51 PM.
Whenever I'm building cover quickly, there's this tiny, sharp hitch in the movement that's incredibly obvious on a 144Hz screen. I checked the logs and found the M.2 interface on the Colorful CVN B760M had response times swinging between 18-45ms during fragmented asset loads. I tried disabling the Windows indexing service, but that did absolutely nothing—a useless attempt against a hardware bottleneck. I went into the BIOS and forced the PCIe link speed to Gen3 to stabilize the signal and updated the chipset drivers. In RivaTuner, the frame time variance shrank from 12-28ms down to a steady 10-15ms. I actually tried increasing the page file size first, but that just slowed down my boot time and didn't fix the lag. Now the southbridge temp is between 48-54℃. After a final benchmark run, the southbridge is holding steady at 45-50℃. Last updated onApril 27, 2026 10:13 AM.
Every time I entered a crowded city, the game would hitch at about 80% loading, which was incredibly frustrating. Checking the telemetry, I saw the Huntkey T600's 12V rail dropping by 0.5V under peak load, starving the GPU and forcing a quick frequency dip. I tried lowering shadow quality, which gave me a measly 5fps boost but didn't stop the hitching—it was clearly a power delivery issue. I switched my Windows power plan to 'Ultimate Performance' and replaced the stock 8-pin GPU cables with higher-gauge ones to kill the resistance. Voltage ripple dropped from 0.5V to 0.1V, and frame times stabilized from a messy 22-40ms to a clean 16-20ms. I actually plugged the new cables in backward the first time and couldn't boot, which was a real 'facepalm' moment. Now the PSU fan sits around 1000RPM and RAM temps are steady at 58°C - 63°C. It's rock solid now. Last updated onMay 11, 2026 7:47 PM.