Seeing a perfect combat flow interrupted by a horizontal tear was almost funny—the timing was just too precise! The Sapphire RX 7650 GRE drivers were struggling with 144Hz, with frame times fluctuating between 6-12ms, causing a micro-mismatch between the GPU and the monitor. I tried V-Sync first, but the input lag increased by about 20ms, making the game feel like I was fighting underwater—a total disaster. I went into the AMD Adrenalin software, enabled Enhanced Sync, and capped the frame rate at 141 FPS to stay within the FreeSync range. In RTSS, the frame time graph went from a jagged mess to a flat line, and the tearing vanished. I did notice some UI flickering after turning on Enhanced Sync, but updating to driver version 24.1.1 fixed it. GPU temps are staying cool at 58-64℃. The sync mode switch is confirmed and working perfectly. Last updated onApril 9, 2026 6:58 PM.
I was hyped to see the city simulation looking so realistic, but then the game just vanished to desktop without warning. The logs showed the Vastarmor RX 9070 XT was hitting a 5.2-8.1ns sync delay when handling FiveM's async compute. I tried increasing the page file size, which stopped some crashes but doubled the loading times—a total band-aid solution that left me frustrated. I took a risk and flashed the latest Beta driver, then manually dropped the core clock from 2600MHz to 2400MHz for better compatibility. After 10 hours of stress tests, no more crashes. I noticed some minor FPS dips after downclocking, but bumping the core voltage to 1.12V smoothed it out. Temps are 58-64℃. Switching Windows power mode to 'High Performance' made the response feel instant. Frame times are now a rock-solid 5.1-6.4ms. Last updated onApril 3, 2026 7:52 PM.
I was on a total heater with my aim, feeling amazing, until these random micro-stutters started ruining the flow. Looking at the logs, the NH-D15 G2 has a fan spin-up delay of 1-2 seconds, which lets the CPU hit these nasty 85-92℃ spikes during sudden load bursts. I tried 'Full Speed' in the BIOS, but the drone of the fans in a quiet room was just too much—I realized balance is everything. I switched to a stepped response curve, triggering 60% speed at 60℃, and nudged the core voltage to 1.18V. AIDA64 stress tests showed those 92℃ peaks collapsing down to 76-80℃. I noticed some slight RPM oscillation at low loads initially, but enabling fan smoothing filtered that right out. Now the CPU stays between 62-68℃ and everything feels buttery. Switching the power plan from 'Balanced' to 'High Performance' made the response time feel way snappier, with temps still holding at 62-68℃. Last updated onApril 10, 2026 12:42 PM.
I was so hyped to see the Edo period streets, but the excitement was cut short by constant, random crashes. I did some digging and found that the memory controller on the Colorful B760M-D PRO V20 was having timing drifts of 4.2-6.8ns when running at 5600MHz. I tried increasing the page file size in Windows, which slowed down the crashes but doubled the loading times—a total waste of time. I decided to risk it and flash the BIOS to the latest stable version, then manually dropped the RAM speed from 5600MHz to 5200MHz for better compatibility. After an 8-hour stress test, the crashes completely stopped. I did notice some slight FPS drops in a few areas after the downclock, but a tiny tweak of the DRAM voltage to 1.30V smoothed everything out. RAM temps are now a cool 42-48℃. Switching the power plan to 'High Performance' made the whole system feel way more responsive. It's stable now, though I hate having to run my RAM slower than rated. Last updated onApril 1, 2026 12:03 PM.
Should I lock the frequency on my Manli Nebula RTX 5060 to stop frame drops during Nioh 2 combat?
AI FiltersI was absolutely hyped during those perfect parries and counters, but the occasional frame drop kept pulling me out of the zone. Looking at the logs, the Manli Nebula RTX 5060's core clock was bouncing frantically between 1800MHz and 2400MHz, causing frame times to swing from 12ms to 35ms. I tried the 'Prefer Maximum Performance' setting in the driver, but the card spiked to 82°C and started throttling—a classic case of chasing raw power and losing stability. I switched tactics and used MSI Afterburner to lock the core clock at 2100MHz and nudged the voltage to 1.05V. AIDA64 stress tests showed frame times finally converging into a steady 13-16ms window. The fans got about 5dB louder after the lock, but a custom fan curve brought the noise back down. Now the GPU stays between 65°C - 72°C and the gameplay is incredibly fluid. Switching the rendering mode from 'Auto' to 'High Performance' in-game was the final touch. Frame times are now locked at 13-16ms. Last updated onApril 7, 2026 6:29 PM.