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

It's honestly ridiculous that a CPU of this caliber was giving me micro-stutters in the upgraded Sword and Fairy; it felt like I was playing on a decade-old laptop. The P-cores and E-cores on the i5-14600KF were hitting 15-25ms scheduling delays during specific rendering tasks, causing frame times to jump between 18-32ms. I tried maxing out the graphics settings, but that just increased the stutter frequency—a complete waste of time. I finally went into the BIOS, disabled C-State deep sleep, and forced the game process affinity to stay within the P-core range. RTSS monitoring showed frame times tighten up from 22-38ms to a consistent 10-14ms, making the gameplay feel incredibly fluid. I did have a moment where my browser froze in the background after locking the cores, but changing the priority to 'High' instead of 'Realtime' stabilized everything. Core temps stayed around 65-72℃. Exported all the scheduling error logs from the Event Viewer to confirm the fix. Last updated onMarch 26, 2026 6:18 PM.

It was honestly ridiculous—swinging through Manhattan and the game would just hitch for a split second while loading building models. I checked the logs and the SN850X was hitting latency spikes of 15-22ms under peak load, causing the frame time to swing wildly between 20-35ms. I tried tanking the graphics settings to low, but the game looked like a pixelated mess and the stutters were still there. What a waste of time. I finally used the WD dashboard to flash the latest firmware and disabled the Windows write-cache flushing policy. Monitoring with RTSS, the stutters dropped from 4 times a minute to basically zero. I did have a scare where the drive wasn't detected after the firmware update, but a quick reboot and partition check sorted it out. Temps are hovering around 55-62℃. I've exported all the I/O error logs from the Event Viewer for my own peace of mind. Last updated onMarch 31, 2026 8:05 PM.

This was just ridiculous. I'm cruising through the zone and the game just hitches every time a new chunk of terrain loads. The bandwidth on my Crucial DDR4 3200MHz 16GB was struggling, and the memory controller was showing scheduling delays of 15-22ms, causing my FPS to bounce erratically between 50 and 70. I tried dropping all the graphics settings to low, but the game looked like a blurry mess and the stuttering was still there. What a waste of time. I went into the BIOS, locked the frequency at 3200MHz, and disabled Superfetch in Windows to stop unnecessary RAM bloating. In RTSS, the frame times tightened up from 25-40ms down to a steady 12-18ms. I actually tried overclocking to 3600MHz for a bit, but the system just threw memory parity errors and crashed. Had to dial it back to 3200MHz for stability. Temps were fine at 40-46℃. Exported all the event logs to make sure the drops stopped. Last updated onMarch 19, 2026 7:13 PM.

It's honestly ridiculous—in the middle of these beautiful landscapes, my CPU started tanking because the motherboard power delivery was overheating. The VRM heatsinks on the GALAX B760M D4 Wi-Fi hit 92-98℃, causing the clock speed to plummet from 4.8GHz to 2.1GHz instantly. I tried the 'amateur' move of taking off the case side panel, which only dropped temps by 5℃ and let in a mountain of dust while the fans still sounded like a jet engine. I ended up redesigning the airflow, adding two 120mm top exhaust fans, and setting a custom fan curve to hit 100% speed at 75℃. HWInfo showed the VRM temps finally stayed between 78-84℃, and the frequency stops jumping around. The noise was unbearable at first with full speed, but a stepped curve made it tolerable. CPU temps stayed at 68-75℃. Exported all the stress test logs for verification. Last updated onMarch 22, 2026 8:58 AM.

It's unbelievable that a high-end Snow board would just crash to desktop during scene loads without even leaving an error code. The memory controller on the ASUS ROG STRIX Z890-A was swinging between 1.35V and 1.42V while running 8000MHz RAM, and Hellblade 2 just doesn't tolerate that instability. I tried downclocking to 6000MHz; the crashes stopped, but load times jumped from 10 to 30 seconds, which felt like a total waste of time. I ended up flashing the latest BIOS and switched from XMP to manual timings at 36-38-38-80, while nudging VDDQ to 1.38V. After 4 passes of MemTest86 with zero errors, the system is finally stable as a rock. I actually pushed the voltage too high at first and the RAM hit 65℃, triggering thermal protection until I added a dedicated RAM cooler. VRM temps now hover around 52-58℃. I exported all the crash logs via Event Viewer and fans are steady at 1400-1600RPM. Last updated onMarch 25, 2026 9:39 PM.

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