It was ridiculous—every time a boss unleashed an attack, the game would hitch so hard it felt like a low-budget slideshow. Checking the Jonsbo CR-1400E logs, once CPU load hit 80%, temps were swinging wildly between 85°C - 95°C, triggering aggressive throttling. I tried switching Windows to 'Power Saver' mode, which just made the game run like a snail without fixing the stutters—complete waste of time. I eventually set a stepped fan curve in BIOS, slamming the fans to 100% at 70°C, and added a 120mm exhaust fan to the back of the case. Using RTSS, my 1% lows jumped from 22fps to 48fps. The funny part is I spent an hour reseating my RAM three times thinking they were loose before I realized it was a thermal issue. Now temps stay between 72°C - 78°C and frame times are a solid 5.1ms - 6.4ms. It's finally playable, but the fans are loud as hell. Last updated onApril 23, 2026 8:38 AM.
Man, playing a modern AAA title on 8GB of RAM in this day and age is basically a psychological endurance test. My Kingston 8GB DDR4 2400 hit the ceiling immediately when loading high-res village models, forcing the system to swap to the incredibly slow page file. Frame times were jumping all over the place between 20-80ms. I tried dropping the graphics to the absolute minimum, but the stutters stayed because my browser was eating up the remaining RAM in the background—honestly ridiculous. I manually set the virtual memory to a fixed 16GB and nuked every unnecessary background service. Now, memory usage hovers around 7.2-7.6GB and the drops are way less frequent. I did hit a brief system deadlock after the first page file change, but a reboot and disabling Fast Boot fixed it. RAM temps are 42-48℃ and fans are steady at 1400-1600RPM. It's still a struggle, but it works. Last updated onApril 16, 2026 10:02 PM.
It's honestly ridiculous. Every time I go for a stealth kill, the game turns into a low-budget slideshow, skipping frames three times a second. I monitored the i7-14700KF and saw the Vcore swinging wildly between 1.1V and 1.3V during physics-heavy scenes, forcing the CPU to trigger internal error correction. I tried switching Windows to 'Balanced' power mode, which just lowered the temp by 5℃ but did nothing for the stutters—a total waste of my life. I went straight into the BIOS, added a +0.05V offset to the Vcore, and capped the PL1 power limit at 253W. Using RTSS, my 1% lows jumped from 25 FPS to 50 FPS. The funniest part was when I fat-fingered the voltage setting on the first try and the CPU hit 100℃ instantly, triggering a hard shutdown. My heart nearly stopped. Now it runs at 75-82℃. Exported the WHEA logs to confirm the voltage spikes are gone. Last updated onApril 6, 2026 9:13 AM.
Man, it's ridiculous that a B850M board is turning my game into a slideshow during map loads. The PCIe 4.0 link on the Maxsun MS-Terminator B850M was struggling with massive amounts of fragmented assets; due to signal interference, I saw micro-packet loss when throughput hit 3.5-4.2GB/s. I tried increasing the virtual memory size, but that actually made the stuttering worse—a total rookie mistake on my part. I went into the BIOS and forced the NVMe slot to Gen3 mode to prioritize signal stability and disabled Fast Startup in Windows. In RTSS, the frame time variance dropped from a wild 15-40ms to a stable 12-18ms. The SSD took an extra second to be recognized after the Gen3 switch, but the latest chipset drivers fixed that. VRM temps were around 55-62℃. I've archived the I/O conflict logs, and the frame pacing is finally consistent. Last updated onMarch 20, 2026 6:04 PM.
It was absolutely ridiculous. Walking through town felt like watching a low-budget slideshow, with the screen hitching twice every second. I checked the WD SN850's read/write curves and saw the latency swinging wildly between 40ms and 120ms during random small file access, which basically choked the entire rendering pipeline. I tried disabling the Windows page file, but that just led to an immediate crash—total waste of my life. I went straight to the Western Digital Dashboard and flashed the firmware to version 2.1.0, then forced the PCIe mode to Gen4 in the BIOS instead of 'Auto'. Using RTSS, my 1% lows jumped from 20 FPS to 45 FPS. The funniest part was that I almost bricked the drive during the update because of a power flicker, leaving it in read-only mode until I reflashed it. Temps are stable at 50-55℃. I exported the I/O error logs from Event Viewer to confirm the fix, and it's finally rock steady. Last updated onApril 13, 2026 7:47 PM.