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I finally found the culprit! My RAM was running at a pathetic 2133MHz base frequency—a total waste of hardware. This bottleneck caused 12-18ms of instruction latency when the CPU handled ray-traced geometry, making block loading feel sluggish. I tried the 'Ultimate Performance' power plan in Windows, but that only gave me a measly 4 FPS boost. I rebooted, hit the BIOS, and loaded the XMP profile to jump to 2666MHz. Checking CPU-Z, the frequency snapped into place, and my minimums jumped from 32 FPS to 58 FPS. The difference in smoothness is insane. I did have a scare where the system wouldn't POST after enabling XMP, but a quick reseat of the sticks and cleaning the gold contacts fixed it. RAM temps are now 40-46℃ at 1.35V. In-game monitors show the frame generation is finally flat, with temps staying between 42-48℃. Just make sure your sticks are seated properly. Last updated onMarch 18, 2026 9:51 PM.

The difference in responsiveness is insane! Before this, it felt like there was a thin layer of glue between my mouse and the screen, which is lethal in a game like CS2. The C-State power saving on the Colorful BATTLE-AX B760M-WHITE WIFI was putting cores to sleep, causing wake-up delays of 0.5-1.2ms. I tried the Windows 'High Performance' plan, but the input lag still hovered around 12-18ms—software tweaks just aren't enough. I rebooted into the BIOS, disabled every single CPU C-State option, and turned off Intel SpeedStep. RivaTuner showed the frame intervals tighten from a messy 8-15ms to a crisp 4-7ms. My mouse feels like it's teleporting now. I did notice my idle power draw jumped by about 15W, so I had to tweak the fan curves to handle the extra heat. CPU temps are now 65-72℃, and frame times are locked in at 4.2-5.8ms. Last updated onMarch 19, 2026 12:06 PM.

The difference in responsiveness is insane! Before this, it felt like there was a thin layer of glue between my mouse and the screen, which is lethal in a game like CS2. The C-State power saving on the Colorful BATTLE-AX B760M-WHITE WIFI was putting cores to sleep, causing wake-up delays of 0.5-1.2ms. I tried the Windows 'High Performance' plan, but the input lag still hovered around 12-18ms—software tweaks just aren't enough. I rebooted into the BIOS, disabled every single CPU C-State option, and turned off Intel SpeedStep. RivaTuner showed the frame intervals tighten from a messy 8-15ms to a crisp 4-7ms. My mouse feels like it's teleporting now. I did notice my idle power draw jumped by about 15W, so I had to tweak the fan curves to handle the extra heat. CPU temps are now 65-72℃, and frame times are locked in at 4.2-5.8ms. Last updated onMarch 19, 2026 12:06 PM.

I finally found the culprit for my terrible performance! My G.Skill Trident Z was running at the base frequency of 2133MHz—what a waste of hardware. This missing speed caused 10-15ms of instruction latency during physics collisions, making the combat feel sluggish and unresponsive. I first tried enabling 'Ultimate Performance' in the Windows power plan, but that only gave me a pathetic 2 FPS boost. I rebooted into the BIOS and loaded the XMP 2.0 profile, jumping the frequency to 3200MHz instantly. In the CPU-Z memory tab, it showed 1600MHz (effective 3200MHz), and my minimums leaped from 45 to 72 FPS. The smoothness is just exhilarating. I did have a scare where the system wouldn't POST after enabling XMP, but a quick reseat of the sticks and cleaning the gold contacts fixed it. Memory temps are now 40-46℃ at 1.35V. The in-game performance monitor shows the frame times are completely flat now. Last updated onApril 3, 2026 6:36 PM.

I finally found the culprit! This kit had been running at the base 2133MHz frequency this whole time—what a complete waste of hardware. That missing bandwidth caused a 10-15ms instruction delay during physics collisions, making my moves feel sluggish and unresponsive. I tried switching to the 'Ultimate Performance' power plan in Windows, but that only gave me a measly 4 FPS boost and didn't touch the core stuttering. I rebooted, entered the BIOS, and loaded the XMP profile to hit 3200MHz. CPU-Z confirmed the jump immediately, and my minimum FPS leaped from 55 to 88. The smoothness is honestly exhilarating. I did have a scare where the system wouldn't POST after the first XMP attempt, but a quick reseat of the sticks and cleaning the gold contacts fixed it. Temps are 40-46℃ at 1.35V. In-game monitors show the frame generation is finally stable. Last updated onMarch 30, 2026 9:37 PM.

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