Watching your FPS plummet from 60 to 15 in a split second is an absolute joke, especially during those explosive combat sequences. The VRM on the ASRock A320M-HDV R4.0 just isn't built for the Remastered load, with temps hitting 105℃ and triggering aggressive throttling. I tried enabling 'Ultimate Performance' in Windows, but that just fed the fire, making the throttling even worse. I had to go old-school and zip-tie a small 4cm fan directly over the VRM heatsinks and cap the CPU power limit to 65W in the BIOS. Monitoring via HWiNFO, the VRM temps dropped from 105℃ to a much safer 72-78℃, and frame times were finally tamed within 12-18ms. I did notice that capping the power slowed down initial loading, so I bumped my RAM from 2400MHz to 3000MHz to compensate. CPU cores are now chilling at 65-72℃, and after a 3-hour stress test, there are zero drops. RAM temps stayed between 58-63℃, making the whole experience tolerable. Last updated onApril 2, 2026 2:13 PM.
Getting a black screen followed by a driver reset notification right in the middle of a horror sequence is a total mood killer. The factory OC on the Sapphire RX 7800 XT Polar Edition is pushed way too high; while rendering dynamic shadows in Dead Space 2, the core voltage was swinging violently between 1.1V and 1.2V, triggering TDR crashes. I tried updating to the latest WHQL drivers, but it actually made things worse, moving from one crash per hour to one every ten minutes. It became obvious that the clock speed was the culprit. I jumped into the AMD Software, dropped the max frequency by 100MHz, and manually locked the voltage curve at 2200MHz. In 3DMark stress tests, a system that used to choke in 15 minutes now runs for 2 hours straight with core temps at 62-68℃. I lost about 5 FPS initially, but the actual feel is way smoother because the instant freezes are gone. VRAM temps settled at 75-82℃ with fans at 1600 RPM. After a 5-hour marathon, zero crashes, with VRAM staying between 76-81℃. Last updated onApril 3, 2026 9:39 PM.
My rig just went black and rebooted without warning, which is the ultimate red flag for thermal failure. Even though the Cooler Master ML360 SUB-ZERO has that beastly TEC module, my core temps were skyrocketing from 40℃ to 100℃ in seconds, meaning there was definitely a gap between the cold plate and the CPU IHS. I tried forcing the max cooling mode in the software, but I actually saw slight condensation forming around the block, which almost shorted my motherboard—that was a terrifying moment. I tore it down, reapplied high-grade liquid metal, and used a torque wrench to hit exactly 0.6Nm on all four screws. Running AIDA64, the temps plummeted to a crazy 35-42℃ range, and the system finally stopped crashing. I messed up the first time by tightening unevenly, which left some hot spots, but the diagonal tightening method cleared it up. Pump is humming at 2800 RPM and fans at 1200 RPM. After 4 hours of stress testing, it's finally stable with RAM staying at 58-63℃. Last updated onApril 23, 2026 12:59 PM.
Watching my FPS plummet from 144 to 20 in a split second is absolutely infuriating, especially during heavy asset loads. With only 30GB left on my GW3300 256GB, Windows was aggressively resizing the page file between 8-12GB, creating insane write latency. I tried clearing temp files to free up space, but that was a band-aid fix that lasted ten minutes before the drops returned. I realized I had to stop the OS from playing games with my memory, so I manually set a static virtual memory range of 16GB. This stopped the CPU spikes caused by dynamic memory mapping. Monitoring frame times, the wild 40-110ms swings were crushed down to a tight 6-14ms. I actually overshot it at first by setting 32GB, which made my boot times crawl, so I dialed it back to 16GB for the sweet spot. SSD temps stay around 42-50℃ with writes at 450-600MB/s. Memory diagnostics show a 60% drop in page swaps, with RAM temps at 58-63℃. Last updated onMarch 27, 2026 4:17 PM.
Having your FPS plummet from 144 to 40 in the middle of a fight is absolutely brutal, especially during those particle-heavy effect bursts. I checked HWInfo and the VRM on the Colorful B760M-D PRO V20 was hitting 102℃, which triggered a massive frequency throttle. My first instinct was to enable 'Ultimate Performance' in Windows, but that just pushed the temps higher and made the throttling even worse—total opposite of what I wanted. I ended up rigging a small fan to blow directly onto the motherboard's power delivery area and went into the BIOS to cap the CPU power limit at 125W. The results were instant: VRM temps crashed from 102℃ down to 75℃ - 81℃, and frame time variance stayed within 12ms - 18ms. I did notice that capping the power slowed down the initial game load, but I balanced that out by pushing my RAM from 3200MHz to 3600MHz. CPU cores are now stable at 68℃ - 75℃. After a 3-hour stress test, there are zero drops. Power delivery is finally sorted. Last updated onApril 7, 2026 8:50 AM.