Watching my FPS bounce between 60 and 40 like a heart monitor was driving me insane, especially after a few failed boss fights. The B240's default 'smart' pump mode has a 3-5 second delay when handling rapid power spikes, leaving my core temps swinging wildly between 70°C and 92°C. I tried dropping the CPU voltage by 0.05V in the BIOS, but the game just froze during big map loads—undervolting wasn't the answer. I went straight into the control panel and locked the pump speed to a constant 100%, while lowering the radiator fan trigger to 55°C. In RTSS, the frame time variance shrunk from a chaotic 15-45ms down to a tight 12-16ms. The smoothness is night and day. The only downside is the high-pitched pump whine at night, which I managed to mask by tweaking the radiator fans to 1200 RPM. Liquid temps are now 32-36°C and cores stay at 68-74°C. Stress tests confirm no more sudden drops; the input lag is finally gone. Last updated onApril 8, 2026 10:20 AM.
The game kept crashing without warning once I hit Chapter 3, which honestly had me stressed out. My Great Wall GW3300 512GB only had about 40-60GB left, and Windows was struggling to expand the page file, causing massive write latency while RAM usage bounced between 15.2-16.8GB. I tried uninstalling every useless app I owned to free up space, but the crashes didn't stop—it felt like I was fighting a losing battle. I eventually switched from 'System Managed' virtual memory to a custom size, locking it between 16384-32768MB and moving it to a non-system partition. In Task Manager, disk active time plummeted from 90% to a chill 30-40%, and the crashes stopped completely. I did notice a weird stutter during boot after the change, but disabling the Indexing Service smoothed it out. Drive temps are around 42-48℃ with 15-22% load. Event Viewer shows no more 0x0000005 memory errors. Last updated onApril 5, 2026 1:24 PM.
Watching my frame rate bounce between 50 and 20 FPS like a heart monitor was pure anxiety, especially when fighting huge monsters. The Colorful H610M-K has almost no heatsinking on the VRMs, and temps were peaking between 90-105℃, which forced the CPU to throttle hard. I tried switching to the High Performance power plan in Windows, but that just pushed the CPU to 100℃ and triggered a full system reboot—a wake-up call that software fixes weren't enough. I jumped into the BIOS and bumped the PL1 power limit from 65W to 80W, then added a high-static pressure exhaust fan to the top of my case. Using HWInfo, I saw the CPU clocks stabilize at 3.0-3.3GHz instead of the erratic 2.2-3.4GHz range. The VRMs actually hit 110℃ for a moment after the tweak, so I had to slap some thermal pads on the inductors to bring them down to 85-90℃. CPU temps settled at 78-84℃. The stuttering is basically gone, though the VRMs are still running pretty hot. Last updated onMarch 27, 2026 4:18 PM.
Every time I stepped into a dense area in Limgrave, the game would just vanish and dump me back to the desktop. It is a complete nightmare during boss fights. Trying to run a 2024 AAA title on ADATA ValueRAM 4GB is basically a suicide mission; the system was constantly swapping to the slow page file, causing frame times to spike between 30-120ms. I tried dropping every single setting to low, but while I gained maybe 10 FPS, the crashes didn't stop. I eventually manually set the virtual memory to a fixed 24GB and killed every unnecessary background service. In my tests, memory usage sat right at 3.8-3.9GB, and the crashes finally stopped. I actually messed up at first by putting the page file on a mechanical HDD, which tripled the loading times until I moved it to the SSD. Temps stayed around 42-48℃. It is stable now, though 4GB is barely enough to keep the lights on. Last updated onApril 9, 2026 9:23 PM.
Staring at that infinite loading icon while switching camera views was driving me insane. The low bandwidth on the ASRock A320M just can't handle the data load of a modern open world, with RAM usage pegged at 96%, causing constant I/O blocks. I tried dropping every single graphics setting to low, which gave me a pathetic 8 FPS boost but didn't stop the freezing—really depressing stuff. I ended up going into System Advanced settings and manually locked the page file to 24GB on my fastest NVMe partition and killed every useless background app. In Resource Monitor, the page file R/W dropped from 160MB/s to 40MB/s, and load times plummeted from 45s to 18s. I actually tried putting the page file on an old HDD first, which made the lag three times worse until I moved it back to the SSD. RAM temps are hovering around 40-46℃. The cache scheduling is finally behaving. Last updated onApril 13, 2026 3:03 PM.