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

Every time I hit a dense area, my CPU temps would rocket from 62℃ to 97-99℃ in like ten seconds, which just killed the game instantly. It was incredibly frustrating. The Jonsbo CR-1400 ARGB Black Edition just couldn't react fast enough to these bursts, letting heat build up at the core. I tried dropping the graphics to Low, but the game looked like a PS2 title and it still crashed occasionally, which was a total joke. I went into the BIOS and slashed the fan response time from 2 seconds down to 0.4 seconds, then undervolted the core by 0.03V. HWiNFO showed the peaks dropping to a manageable 83-87℃. I actually went too far with the undervolt at first and got a Blue Screen of Death immediately upon booting, so I had to back it off to -0.01V for stability. Now the load sits between 70-90% and the temp curve is actually flat. After five stress tests in the heaviest zones, no more crashes, and the controls feel way more responsive. Last updated onFebruary 25, 2026 7:23 PM.

Whenever a summon appeared on screen, the ground textures would suddenly turn into a blurry grey mess, which was incredibly stressful. Even though the TiPro9000 hits 7000MB/s, certain firmware versions have a logic bug with DirectStorage commands, meaning some assets failed to respond within the 15-25ms window. I tried lowering the graphics settings, but that was a nightmare—the FPS went up, but the textures popped even more. I finally used the official management software to jump from firmware 1.0 to 2.1 and re-verified the 4K alignment using a partition tool. CrystalDiskMark showed random read stability jumping from 60% to 95%, and the texture glitches vanished. The update process was a pain; it froze at 45% until I rebooted and killed my antivirus. Temps now hover around 44-52℃. The in-game performance analyzer shows the asset stream is finally healthy, and the input response feels way more tactile. Last updated onFebruary 17, 2026 2:56 PM.

It was a nightmare; in the middle of a massive firefight, my FPS would tank from 120 to 65 in seconds, and the anxiety was real. The default scheduling on the i5-14600KF was fighting over P-Core and E-Core resources during heavy physics calcs, causing execution delays of 22-35ms. I tried the 'Ultimate Performance' power plan first, but that was a rookie mistake—my CPU hit 98℃ and thermal throttled immediately. I went back into the BIOS, switched the load-line voltage from Auto to L3 mode, and manually pinned the main game thread to the P-cores. In RTSS, my frame times stopped swinging between 25-42ms and locked in at 11-15ms. I actually undervolted too far at one point and got a BSOD on boot, but bumping it back to 1.22V stabilized everything. Temps are now hovering between 75-81℃. After five stress tests in the heat of battle, the stutter is dead and the input lag is gone. Last updated onFebruary 21, 2026 12:09 PM.

Every time I stepped into a massive new realm, the game would hitch in these annoying steps. It's stressful when you have a 1TB drive and it still feels slow. While the sequential speeds are great, the random 4K reads on the TiPro9000 were bouncing between 42-58MB/s. I tried disabling the write cache in Windows, which was a total nightmare—loading times actually increased by 3 seconds. I eventually installed the latest vendor drivers, pushed the I/O queue depth from 32 to 128, and tweaked the disk scheduling algorithm in the registry. AIDA64 showed the random read latency drop from 85-110us to a much cleaner 52-64us. I did notice some weird disk usage spikes during idle after the change, but switching the power plan to 'Ultimate Performance' killed that. Temps stayed in the 48-55℃ range. All instruction sets are now loading correctly. Setup complete. Last updated onMarch 8, 2026 1:20 PM.

Every time I entered a physics-heavy scene, I was on edge because the framerate could tank at any second. I found that the 12V rail on the Huntkey Blizzard T600 was hitting ripple fluctuations of 50-60mV during peaks, which caused my GPU core clock to jump erratically between 2100MHz and 1800MHz. I tried locking the core frequency via software, but that just led to the PSU triggering OCP and shutting down my whole rig—it was incredibly frustrating. I eventually switched from a single 8-pin daisy chain to independent dual-rail power and swapped in low-impedance custom modular cables to minimize voltage drop. Looking at the monitoring panel, the ripple was crushed down to a healthy 20-30mV, and my FPS stabilized from a shaky 40-80 range to a consistent 75-82 FPS. I had a scare where the system rebooted twice because a connector wasn't fully clicked in, but once I seated everything, it stayed stable. The PSU fan now hums quietly at 900-1100 RPM, and the input lag is finally gone. Last updated onMarch 15, 2026 12:42 PM.

Back to Top