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This was insane—hitting 300km/h on the track and my memory usage just rocketed to 15GB. The fragmentation from the overflow made my PC feel like it was screaming. With the Crucial DDR5 4800 16GB kit handling 4K textures, the lack of headroom caused severe page replacement, with I/O latency jumping between 120-200ms. I tried disabling the Windows Indexing service first, but that just slowed down my file searches and did absolutely nothing for the lag; a total waste of time. I eventually manually locked the virtual memory to 24GB on a dedicated high-speed partition and forced a standby memory refresh. In the performance analyzer, available memory jumped from a measly 1GB to about 4-6GB, and the stuttering vanished. I did see some brief disk I/O blocking when I first locked the page file, but switching the write policy to disable flushing fixed it. RAM temps were 40-46℃, CPU 65-71℃. I exported all overflow logs via system diagnostics, and fan speeds stayed steady at 1400-1600RPM. Last updated onApril 10, 2026 10:07 AM.

It was honestly ridiculous; in these gorgeous jungle scenes, my character was walking around with transparent clothes. The PCIe link on the Galax B760M D4 Wi-Fi White Phantom was occasionally dropping from Gen4 to Gen3 under load, causing 4K random read speeds to tank from 55MB/s to 11MB/s. I tried disabling Fast Boot in Windows, but that just made my boot times longer without fixing a single texture, which was a complete waste of time. I went into the BIOS and forced the PCIe speed to Gen4 instead of 'Auto' and updated to Intel Chipset Driver v11.0. Using a monitoring tool, I saw read latency drop from 115ms to 42-52ms, and the texture gaps finally vanished. I had some slow boot issues after locking Gen4, but disabling CSM compatibility mode fixed it instantly. SSD temps are now 45℃ - 52℃ and the southbridge is at 58℃ - 63℃. I exported the read logs to verify, and the fans are humming along at 1400-1600RPM. Last updated onApril 15, 2026 11:45 AM.

This was a nightmare. In the middle of a creepy space station, I'm seeing walls turn into transparent blocks—it felt like playing a game from the 90s. It turns out the PCIe link on my ASUS TUF GAMING B760M-PLUS WIFI D4 was dropping from Gen4 to Gen3 under load, causing 4K random reads to tank from 60MB/s to 12MB/s. I tried disabling Fast Startup in Windows, which did absolutely nothing except make my boot time longer. Total waste of time. I eventually went into the BIOS and forced the PCIe speed to Gen4 and updated to Intel Chipset driver v11.0. Using a performance monitor, I saw read latency drop from 120ms to 48-58ms, and the popping finally stopped. I had some slow boot issues after locking Gen4, but turning off CSM mode fixed it instantly. SSD temps stayed 45-52℃, southbridge at 58-63℃, and fans stayed steady at 1400-1600 RPM. Last updated onApril 14, 2026 8:21 PM.

This was unbelievable—my CPU hit 96℃ in under ten minutes. It felt like my cooler was actively trying to cook my processor. The T600 just can't keep up with the multi-threaded madness of MGS Delta, causing my clocks to bounce wildly between 4.5GHz and 3.2GHz. I tried lowering the power limits, but that just cost me 15 FPS and the temps stayed high; a total waste of time. I eventually went into the BIOS, forced the PWM fans to full blast, and swapped the stock paste for a high-conductivity phase-change pad. My monitoring software showed full-load temps drop from 96℃ to 82-86℃, and the frequency swings finally stopped. At first, the fan noise was absolutely deafening, but capping the max speed at 2100 RPM found the sweet spot. CPU temps now sit at 80-84℃ and VRMs are at 62-68℃. I exported the temp curves to my logs, and the fans are now humming steadily at 1400-1600 RPM. It's finally playable. Last updated onApril 18, 2026 10:24 AM.

This was insane—my CPU temps were hitting 98℃, basically turning my PC into a space heater. The fans sounded like a jet engine taking off. The dual-tower design of the PA120 V3 just couldn't keep up with the extreme multi-threaded load of the 2026 title; once the core hit 90℃, the heat pipe efficiency tanked, and my clocks started jittering around 4.2GHz. I tried lowering the power plan in Windows, but that just cost me 20 FPS without really fixing the heat—a complete waste of time. I went into the BIOS and set a much more aggressive stepped fan curve and repasted the base with high-conductivity thermal grease. Using a temp monitor, I managed to squash the peak temps from 98℃ down to a range of 82℃ to 86℃. The frequency spikes finally stopped. At first, the fans were way too loud during idle, so I had to set a silent zone for anything under 50℃. Now the CPU sits at 78℃ to 84℃ and the VRMs are at 65℃ to 70℃. Exported logs show the fans are now steady at 1400-1600RPM. Still, it's a loud setup. Last updated onMarch 30, 2026 7:35 PM.

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