I can finally face the final boss without my PC melting, though this AIO is getting old. I managed to squeeze every bit of performance out of it, which was a huge relief. The B240 was showing a 10-15℃ thermal drift under load, with cores idling in the 88-94℃ range, causing my FPS to swing wildly between 60 and 45. I tried forcing the pump to full speed via software, but the high-pitched whine was so piercing I couldn't hear the game—completely unacceptable. I ended up stripping the block, applying high-conductivity thermal paste, and switching to an aggressive fan curve based on CPU package temp in the BIOS. HWiNFO showed the load temps plummet from 92℃ to 76-80℃, and the FPS fluctuations totally stopped. The fans were a bit too loud at idle initially, but dropping the low-load RPM to 600 RPM made it perfect. Now it stays between 65-72℃. Benchmarks confirm the cooling mode switch worked, though I suspect the pump is nearing the end of its life. Last updated onApril 7, 2026 12:41 PM.
I finally got it running! Even with only 512GB, some extreme optimization made it playable, which is actually a rush. The GW3300 512GB is just too small for massive city simulations; the system kept hitting a 0.8-1.5GB virtual memory deficit, causing the game to hard lock. I first tried tanking every single graphics setting to the absolute minimum, but the game looked like a mosaic and still crashed during saves, which was an incredibly frustrating experience. I then manually locked the page file to 16GB and tweaked the disk I/O priority weights in the registry. I saw the memory swap frequency drop from 110 times/sec to about 35-50 times/sec, and I can finally maintain 45 FPS. My boot time slowed down by about 2 seconds after the I/O tweak, but disabling 'Fast Startup' fixed that. Drive temps are 40-52℃, and the speed is steady at 3300MB/s. Frame gen is now stable at 5.1-6.4ms, though the drive is still a bottleneck. Last updated onApril 7, 2026 9:26 AM.
I finally got to experience PCIe 5.0 speeds, but the heat is insane—it's like having a small space heater sitting on my motherboard. The Samsung 9100 PRO core temps shot up to 82-88℃ under load, triggering the motherboard's thermal throttling and crashing my random read speeds from 12000MB/s down to 3000MB/s. Consequently, my FPS tanked from 110 down to 45. I first tried capping the PCIe link to 4.0 in the BIOS; temps dropped to 60℃, but loading times nearly doubled, which was a totally unacceptable trade-off. I ended up reinstalling the stock heatsink and adding a 40mm micro-fan blowing directly on it, while setting the M.2 fan curve to 'Aggressive' in the BIOS. HWInfo shows the drive now peaks at 62-68℃, and the speeds are rock steady. I had some annoying resonance noise right after installing the fan, but replacing the rubber pads solved it. Idle temps are now 38-42℃, and the benchmark curves are back to peak performance. Last updated onApril 17, 2026 5:44 PM.
Monster Hunter Wilds keeps crashing in complex areas because my ADATA 4GB DDR4 is insufficient.
AI FiltersI actually got it to run! Using only 4GB of RAM is basically a suicide mission for modern AAA titles, but the extreme optimization worked. The ADATA ValueRAM 4GB 2666 was constantly hitting a 0.5-1.2GB deficit when allocating shared VRAM, leading to immediate crashes. I first tried lowering all textures to the absolute minimum, but the game looked like a mosaic and still crashed during map loads—it was a total failure. I then went into the BIOS, enabled 4G Decoding, and manually capped the shared memory threshold at 1.5GB to force the system to prioritize physical VRAM. In the performance analyzer, memory swap frequency dropped from 120 times/sec to 30-45 times/sec, and the game barely holds 30 FPS. I had a problem where my SATA drives weren't recognized after enabling 4G decoding, but a BIOS update fixed that. Memory temps were 40-46℃ at 2666MHz. Resource monitoring confirms the shared mode switch worked, and fans stayed at 1400-1600RPM. Last updated onApril 5, 2026 3:22 PM.
I can finally explore the online world without it turning into a slideshow. It's a struggle for air cooling, but pushing the optimization to the limit actually worked, which is a huge relief. The DeepCool AK500 ARGB was struggling with heat accumulation at the base during high-power loads, causing CPU temps to bounce between 85-92℃ and triggering mild throttling. I first tried 'Ultimate Performance' mode in Windows, but it only gave me a 2 FPS boost—totally useless. I went into the BIOS, cranked the fan speed ceiling to 100%, and slapped two high-pressure fans in the front of the case to force more cold air in. RTSS showed the frame times tightening from a shaky 18-35ms to a consistent 14-17ms. I did have a bit of case resonance after adding the fans, but switching to rubber anti-vibration mounts killed the noise. CPU temps are now stable between 78-83℃. Stress tests confirm the cooling mode switch worked, and the system is no longer throttling. Last updated onApril 13, 2026 9:16 AM.