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

Every time I hit a new scene, the screen would go black for three seconds followed by a 'driver stopped responding' error. After the third time, I was genuinely stressed. It's frustrating because my hardware is top-tier, yet the stability was worse than my old card, making me suspect a messy API conflict. I tried disabling Ray Tracing, but the black screens kept popping up with a 12 ms - 15 ms response lag—just a total waste of time. I eventually used DDU to completely wipe every registry remnant and did a clean install of a specific stable driver version, locking the core voltage at 1.08 V. On the monitoring panel, the GPU clock finally settled between 2400 MHz - 2550 MHz with temps at 67℃ - 72℃. Even then, I had some minor drops until I disabled 'Hardware-Accelerated GPU Scheduling' in Windows, which finally dropped the response time below 7 ms. VRAM usage stabilized at 9.8 GB - 11.2 GB, and the fan curve kicked in at 60℃. The whole system finally feels locked in and the input lag is gone. Last updated onMarch 10, 2026 2:35 PM.

While sneaking through the rat swarms, my PC just black-screened and rebooted. I checked the logs and saw my CPU was sitting at a freezing 32-36℃—the temperature delta was so extreme it caused voltage instability. I spent hours obsessing over RAM slots thinking it was a compatibility issue, which was a total nightmare and a complete waste of time. I finally used the control software to switch the semiconductor mode from 'Turbo' to 'Intelligent' and locked the lower limit to 45-50℃ to avoid any condensation risks. My core voltage swing dropped from 0.12-0.18V down to 0.05-0.08V, and my FPS stabilized from a jumpy 42-65 to a solid 58-62. I initially tried lowering the pump speed, which just created hot spots. Once I synced the radiator fan curves, the heat exchange normalized. There's a slight coil whine when the TEC kicks in, but the stability is great. System logs are clean now, and the input lag is gone. Last updated onMarch 15, 2026 10:57 AM.

During chaotic team fights with everyone dumping abilities, the input lag became unbearable. It's an absolute killer in competitive play. The default timings on the Jginyue B760M GAMING D4 are way too conservative, pushing memory latency up to 80-90ns. I tried the auto-overclock feature first, but it just gave me a parade of Blue Screens of Death, which was incredibly frustrating. I switched to manual tuning, squeezing the timings from 18-22-22-42 down to 16-18-18-38. I noticed RAM temps climbing to 52℃ - 56℃ during the process. The '16' setting was unstable at first, but after a slight voltage bump to 1.35V, it finally passed a 2-hour stability check. CPU temps hovered between 72℃ - 78℃, and the fans got noticeably louder. Comparing the 1% lows, I saw them jump from 32 FPS to 48 FPS. The game finally feels responsive, and the finger-to-screen feedback is snappy now, though the VRMs on this board run pretty hot. Last updated onFebruary 10, 2026 11:47 AM.

Every time I entered a detailed corridor, the game would just crash to desktop without any warning. After the fourth time, I was honestly ready to uninstall. Even with a 64GB setup being common now, my 32GB kit struggled with the unoptimized assets, hitting 96% usage instantly. I tried turning off every single graphical setting, but the crashes kept happening with a response delay of 18-25ms. It was incredibly frustrating. Eventually, I manually set the virtual memory to a fixed 32GB and locked the frequency at 6400MHz in the BIOS. Resource Monitor showed high page swapping, but the overflow errors finally stopped. At first, the system boot time slowed down, but moving the page file to my NVMe drive fixed that. Temps are around 45°C - 50°C, and while the FPS stays between 50-60, I can actually finish a chapter now. Pressure tests show the allocation curve is finally flat, and the input feels much more responsive. Last updated onFebruary 4, 2026 2:26 PM.

While sneaking through high-density crowds, my rig just black-screened and rebooted. The CPU temp had spiked from 60℃ to 94-98℃ in a heartbeat, causing total instability. I spent hours obsessing over RAM compatibility and swapping slots, which was a complete dead end and honestly pretty frustrating. I finally used the control software to slash the fan response time from 2 seconds to 0.3 seconds and capped the trigger at 75-80℃. I watched the core voltage swings shrink from 0.14-0.20V down to 0.07-0.11V, and my FPS stabilized from a wild 40-62 range to a steady 55-59. My first attempt to lower fan speeds just created hot spots; it wasn't until I synced the dual-fan curves that the heat exchange actually worked. There's a tiny bit of coil whine during startup, but it's solid. System logs show the illegal instruction errors are gone, and the input lag is finally gone. Last updated onFebruary 20, 2026 11:03 AM.

Back to Top