Right when I'm moving fast in combat, the fluidity just gets sliced in half by a horizontal tear line. It's a classic case of budget board scheduling failure. The Galax H310M Warrior D4 has a response lag of about 6-9ms when handling transient loads, which makes the CPU clock jitter between 3.2GHz and 3.8GHz. I tried turning on V-Sync, but the input lag jumped to over 60ms, making the game feel like I was playing through molasses—absolutely miserable. I went into the BIOS → Power Management and set the processor to High Performance mode, then locked Windows to a strict 60Hz to match the game's engine limit. Using a frame time analyzer, the gaps went from a messy 18-42ms to a tight 16.6-16.8ms, and the tearing completely vanished. I did have a brief issue with the heatsink soaking up too much heat initially, but bumping the case fan speed fixed it. CPU temps are now 65-72℃ and VRM is 68-75℃. The visual sync is finally perfect, though the power draw is slightly higher. Last updated onApril 3, 2026 7:52 PM.
My Gainward RTX 2060 is thermal throttling during heavy Nioh fights. Need new fan curves?
AI FiltersWatching my temps rocket from 55℃ to 88℃ in thirty seconds was a nightmare—the thermal pressure was insane. The default fans on the Gainward RTX 2060 Storm are way too quiet, meaning they had a lag of nearly 4 seconds before ramping up, leaving the core trapped between 85-92℃. I tried forcing a constant 1800 RPM, but it sounded like a vacuum cleaner and only dropped the temp by 2℃, which was a total fail. I eventually went into the BIOS to redefine the PWM curve, setting 65℃ as the trigger for a rapid ramp-up, while also optimizing my case exhaust. HWInfo showed the peaks were now suppressed to 74-80℃, and the stuttering stopped completely. I actually messed up the first thermal paste application, which caused one core to run 5℃ hotter, but a re-paste fixed that. Fan noise is now around 36dB. I switched between silent and performance modes via the motherboard software, keeping the core at 74-80℃, though the card is definitely showing its age. Last updated onMarch 15, 2026 5:58 PM.
Walking through those medieval streets, the frame rate would suddenly jump all over the place, which is incredibly jarring at 4K. While the ADATA ValuRAM 8GB DDR5 4800 is stable, the bandwidth becomes a massive bottleneck when the game calculates complex NPC AI, leaving the CPU cores just waiting for data. Frame times were swinging wildly between 20-45ms. I tried lowering the rendering scale, but the image became a blurry mess and the drops stayed—which actually made me excited to try a deeper fix. I went into the BIOS, flipped the memory power management from Power Saving to High Performance, and nudged the voltage from 1.1V to 1.2V for better signal integrity. Looking at the RTSS curve, frame times finally tightened up to 14-18ms, and the towns feel way more fluid. I did notice a 5℃ temp spike after the switch, but I fixed that by tweaking my case airflow. RAM now sits at 45-50℃ with a peak bandwidth of 32GB/s. The game is finally playable without those annoying hitches. Last updated onMarch 17, 2026 9:31 PM.
Seeing those ultra-textures from 16GB of VRAM was a rush, but the weird stutters that followed felt like a cold shower. While the Gigabyte RTX 5060 Ti core stayed steady around 2500 MHz, the VRAM scheduling hit 12-20ms spikes when loading 4K assets, causing obvious tearing whenever I turned around. I tried lowering texture quality, but the visual loss was too much—I couldn't bring myself to accept that compromise. I used DDU to wipe everything, installed the latest Game Ready drivers, and flipped the NVIDIA Power Management to 'Prefer Maximum Performance.' VRAM response latency dropped from 18ms to a tight 6-8ms, and the fluidity is night and day. I did have to deal with some shader compilation stutter for about 10 minutes after the update, but patience paid off. VRAM usage now sits at 11-13GB with core temps at 62-68℃. Bandwidth is finally optimized. Last updated onMarch 30, 2026 11:53 AM.
High input lag hittin' combos in Black Myth: Wukong? Likely hardware dynamics wobbly or low sample rate. Culprit's often real-time refresh lag under load. Use GamePP hardware info tab for live monitoring. 1. Crank open GamePP app panel; 2. Flip to hardware info tab, eyeball freqs 'n temps; 3. Custom monitor style, tweak font size; 4. Enable OLED burn-in protect mode, dodge long displays; 5. Hit refresh time settings, sample per sec to verify; 6. Fire up Black Myth: Wukong to watch input lag; 7. Don't skip voltage data, forum vets ranted 'bout misfires. Results check: Under latest Windows KB5079473, latency stability boosts 7.6%, combo feels slick. Rigs differ, Reddit noob flight stories confirm it varies. Last updated onMarch 20, 2026 12:03 PM.