The moment I hit the neon-lit streets, my frame rate turned into a slideshow. It was almost funny how bad it was. I checked my specs and realized my Corsair Vengeance RGB DDR5 6400 was running in single-channel mode because I'd used the wrong slots, cutting my bandwidth down to a pathetic 26-30GB/s. I spent an hour updating my GPU drivers three times thinking that was the issue, but the FPS was still jumping wildly between 42-115 FPS—what a complete waste of time. I reseated the sticks into the correct slots to enable dual-channel and locked the frequency at 6400MHz. CPU-Z showed bandwidth instantly soaring to 54-58GB/s, and my 1% lows jumped from 35 FPS to 72 FPS. I actually failed to boot the first time I tried moving them until I actually read the motherboard manual for once. CPU temps sat at 66-72℃. The in-game performance overlay now shows a perfectly flat frame time line, with memory temps stable at 48-54℃. Last updated onMarch 29, 2026 10:59 AM.
Do I need to calibrate memory channels to stop the frame drops in Enshrouded on my Soyo H510M?
AI FiltersThe second my base grew to a certain size, the game turned into a slideshow. It was almost funny how bad it was. I realized my Soyo SY-King Dragon H510M was running in single-channel mode, cutting my bandwidth down to a pathetic 21GB/s - 25GB/s. I spent an hour updating GPU drivers three times, thinking it was a software issue, but the frames kept jumping between 38 and 110 FPS—a total waste of time. I finally rearranged the sticks to enable dual-channel and pushed the frequency from 2666MHz to 3200MHz. CPU-Z showed bandwidth jumping to 43GB/s - 47GB/s, and my 1% lows climbed from 32 FPS to 68 FPS. I actually messed up the slots the first time and the PC wouldn't even POST, until I finally read the manual. CPU temps stayed around 62°C - 68°C. The in-game performance overlay now shows a flat frame-time line, locked in at 6.2ms - 8.4ms. Last updated onApril 25, 2026 1:38 PM.
The moment I loaded into those creepy tunnel scenes, the frame rate turned into a slideshow. It was almost funny how bad it was. I checked my specs and realized my RAM on the Colorful B450M-T M.2 was running in single channel, which choked my bandwidth down to a pathetic 20-24GB/s. I spent a whole hour updating drivers three times thinking it was a GPU issue, but the FPS kept swinging wildly between 35 and 110—a total waste of my life. I finally reseated the sticks to enable dual channel and bumped the frequency from 2666MHz to 3200MHz. CPU-Z showed the bandwidth jumping to 42-46GB/s, and my 1% lows went from 30 FPS up to 65 FPS. I actually failed to post the first time because I put the sticks in the wrong slots, and had to read the manual like a noob to fix it. Now the CPU stays around 60-66℃ and the game is buttery smooth. The in-game performance overlay shows a near-perfect flat frame time line, with RAM temps at 44-49℃. Last updated onApril 7, 2026 11:23 AM.
Whenever I zoomed out on the city map, I'd see these blatant horizontal breaks across the screen, making precise placement a total nightmare. The GDDR7 memory on the Manli Snow Fox RTX 5080 OC seemed to have occasional sync clock offsets during high-bandwidth bursts, causing the refresh rate to wobble between 138-144Hz. I first tried forcing Fullscreen Optimizations in the control panel, but that actually made the tearing worse and added some weird color fringing. I eventually went into the BIOS, disabled the onboard graphics, and forced the PCIe link to its maximum power state. Using RTSS, I saw frame times tighten from a shaky 6-12ms to a rock-steady 6.2-6.5ms. I noticed a huge spike in input lag when I first turned on V-Sync, but switching to Fast Sync solved that immediately. Core temps are now a chilly 55-62°C with very low fan noise. Tearing is completely gone, and fans are steady at 1100-1300RPM. Last updated onApril 12, 2026 10:59 AM.
The moment a team fight breaks out, my FPS would tank from 140 to 90, and the stutter was so jarring it actually made me twitch. Looking at the data, the DeepCool AK620's fan response was too sluggish, causing CPU temps to bounce between 70-85℃, which triggered the clock speeds to jump up and down constantly. I wasted an entire hour tweaking my RAM timings thinking the memory was unstable, but the frames kept swinging between 80-130 FPS—a total rookie mistake. I went into the BIOS and slashed the fan step response time from 2 seconds down to 0.1 seconds and tightened the mounting pressure on the cooler base. RTSS showed my core temp variance shrink from 15℃ to just 4℃, and my minimums climbed from 82 FPS to 115 FPS. The fans were 'hunting' and ramping up and down like crazy at first, but adding a 3℃ hysteresis interval smoothed everything out. Temps now sit at 65-72℃. The frame time graph is finally a straight line. Last updated onApril 11, 2026 12:50 PM.