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

Every time I hit a scene with extreme lighting, I was on edge because the system could crash at any second. When handling 4K texture streaming, the FireCuda 530's power draw spiked, sending temperatures screaming up to 82℃ in about 3 seconds, which triggered the hardware's thermal protection and killed the game. I tried enabling 'Power Saver' mode in Windows, but my FPS got sliced in half and the crashes actually happened more often—it was a total disaster. I ended up tweaking my case fan curves to force 100% speed once the drive hit 60℃ and set the PCIe Power Management to 'Maximum Performance'. In stress tests, the temperature range tightened from 75-85℃ down to 58-65℃, and I've played for 5 hours straight without a single crash. I did almost mess up the fan settings by cranking them too high, which created this annoying resonance noise, but dialing it back by 200 RPM fixed it. The SSD now sits at 52-58℃ and feels warm. After a marathon of pressure tests, the stability is finally where it needs to be. Last updated onFebruary 23, 2026 5:25 PM.

It was insane—every time I entered a complex player base, my CPU temp would rocket from 65°C to 96-99°C in ten seconds, causing the game to just vanish from my screen. The default fan curve on the Galax B760M D4 Black Knight is way too sluggish for these bursts. I tried capping the max processor state to 95% in Windows, but my FPS tanked from 110 to 75, which felt like a massive step backward. Instead, I went into BIOS → Monitor → Fan Control and slashed the fan response time from 2 seconds to 0.3 seconds, while undervolting the core by -0.04V. HWiNFO confirmed peak temps dropped to 82-86°C. I actually overdid the undervolt at first and got a Blue Screen of Death immediately upon loading, so I backed it off to -0.02V for stability. Now, CPU load sits between 60-80% with a flat temp curve. After ten consecutive base entries, no more crashes, and the input lag is practically gone. Last updated onMarch 4, 2026 7:32 PM.

Every time I entered those fog-heavy underground areas, the game would just vanish and dump me back to the desktop without a word, which was beyond frustrating. The Gainward RTX 5070 Ti Storm OC was hitting transient power spikes over 450W during heavy ray tracing, causing micro-drops in power delivery. I tried lowering the graphics to medium, but while the FPS went up, the crashes stayed—a total waste of time. I ended up using the official tool to cap the power limit at 90% and flashed the latest firmware to stabilize the voltage scheduling. In 3DMark stress tests, I ran 20 loops with zero errors, bringing the crash rate from 3 per hour down to absolute zero. I did hit a BSOD during the first power limit attempt because the voltage was too lean, but a tiny +0.01V offset fixed the instability. Core temps are now 68-74℃ with fans at 1600 RPM. The power curve is finally smooth and the controls feel snappy again. Last updated onFebruary 19, 2026 12:12 PM.

Walking into a main town is a disaster; my FPS plummeted from 80 to 35 in seconds, and the anxiety was real. The default scheduling on the ASUS ROG STRIX Z890-A Snow was fighting over P-Core and E-Core resources during heavy AI calculations, causing execution delays of 20-30ms. I tried enabling 'Ultimate Performance' in Windows, but the CPU hit 98℃ and throttled immediately—a total rookie mistake that left me feeling defeated. I eventually went into the BIOS Advanced menu, switched Load-Line Calibration to L2 mode, and pinned the game's main thread to the first four cores. RTSS showed frame times tightening from 28-45ms down to 12-16ms. I actually blue-screened a few times because I set the Vcore too low, but it finally stabilized at 1.25V. CPU temps now hover around 72-78℃. After five city stress tests, the lag is gone and the input feels instant. Last updated onMarch 8, 2026 7:59 PM.

Every time I panned across the snowy wasteland, my frames would dive from 90 down to 40. It was honestly anxiety-inducing. The Jonsbo CR-1400E is a compact unit, and it just can't handle 180W+ spikes, causing temps to jump from 70℃ to 95℃ in a heartbeat. I tried the 'Power Saver' plan in Windows, which lowered temps but killed my minimums to 20 FPS—a total fail. I went into the BIOS and capped PL1 at 125W and PL2 at 150W, while forcing the fan to 2200 RPM once it hits 80℃. In side-by-side tests, I lost about 0.2GHz in peak clock, but the frame time variance shrank from 12-45ms to 10-16ms, killing the stutter. I did experience two random reboots when I first set the power limits, but a slight Vcore offset of +0.02V stabilized everything. CPU stays between 82℃ - 88℃ now. The performance analyzer shows a flat frequency curve, and the input lag feels way more responsive. Last updated onFebruary 19, 2026 6:45 PM.

Back to Top