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Whenever I'm fighting a swarm of Necromorphs, my FPS suddenly tanks from 120 down to 45. This kind of instant clock drop is a total mood-killer in a horror game, though I was actually pretty hyped to figure out the fix. The default power plan on the i7 14700KF was causing core frequencies to jump erratically between 2.5GHz and 5.4GHz, creating 30ms spikes in frame time. I tried enabling Ultimate Performance in Windows, but that just pushed the CPU to 100℃, hitting the thermal wall and locking me at 3.0GHz—completely missed the mark. I finally went into the BIOS, nuked the C-State and Intel SpeedStep options, and set a manual core voltage offset of -0.05V to keep the heat in check. RTSS showed the frame time variance shrinking from 15-45ms down to 8-12ms. I did notice my idle power draw jumped by 30W, which I only accepted after adjusting my fan curves. Temps now sit at 72-80℃. Power mode switch successful. Last updated onApril 2, 2026 4:50 PM.

When the jungle explosions hit the screen, there's nothing like that feeling of absolute fluidity when the memory is perfectly synced. The G.Skill Trident Z5 DDR5 6400 has incredibly tight default timings, but the FCLK was jumping randomly between 2000-2133MHz, causing frame times to bounce between 11-25ms. I tried the 'one-click' EXPO profile in BIOS, but the system just hard-locked after 15 minutes of gameplay. That simple fix is clearly a myth on DDR5 platforms. I manually locked the FCLK at 2000MHz and bumped the memory voltage to 1.4V to ensure a strict 1:1 sync mode. Checking RivaTuner, the frame rate swing narrowed from 70-95fps to a much tighter 85-92fps. I did see some minor memory parity errors at first, but loosening the tRAS to 88 cycles killed those off completely. CPU temps are holding at 65-72℃ and the RAM is at 52-58℃. The performance panel confirms sync mode is active, and everything feels rock solid now. Last updated onMarch 28, 2026 1:06 PM.

The visual punch of Ray Tracing is incredible once the performance is stable, and seeing it run properly is just satisfying. Even though the PA120 SE is a beast, the CPU temps were bouncing between 60-85℃ in RTX mode, causing the motherboard to constantly trigger boost clock switches. This made my frame rate jump erratically between 60-110 FPS. I tried the 'Silent' profile on my motherboard, which was a disaster—the noise stopped, but temps hit 95℃ and the lag became unbearable. I eventually built a custom fan curve, setting 65℃ as the trigger for full speed, and added a +0.03V offset in the BIOS to stabilize the voltage. RivaTuner showed the frame times tighten from 15-30ms down to 9-13ms. I had a couple of boot failures when I first messed with the voltage, so I backed it off to +0.02V. Now the CPU stays between 65-74℃ with fans at 1400 RPM. The performance analyzer shows the frequency is finally flat, with frame times locked at 7.2-9.8ms. Last updated onMarch 10, 2026 8:23 PM.

Right as the jungle textures were popping in, the read speed would dip, causing these annoying micro-stutters. The old firmware on the WD SN850 2TB has some instruction set conflicts with 4K random reads, making I/O wait times jump between 15-40ms. I tried disabling Fast Startup in Windows, but that didn't touch the in-game loading lag—complete miss on that one. I used the Western Digital Dashboard to flash the latest 2.1.0 firmware and realigned the disk partitions. CrystalDiskMark showed random reads climbing from 60MB/s to 85-92MB/s, and load times dropped by nearly 4 seconds. I did notice a 5-second boot delay right after the update, but updating the motherboard chipset drivers cleared that up. Temps are sitting between 42-50℃ and the read curve is finally flat. Comparing the before and after, it's a night and day difference in smoothness. Last updated onMarch 19, 2026 2:31 PM.

When the swordplay is fluid and the FCLK is perfectly synced, the game feels incredible. The Biostar B650MT defaulted to 5200MHz memory, but the FCLK was jumping randomly between 2000-2133MHz, causing frame times to bounce between 12-28ms. I tried just turning on EXPO, but the system hard-locked after 10 minutes of gameplay. AM5 platforms are picky like that. I manually locked the FCLK at 2000MHz and nudged the memory voltage to 1.3V to ensure a strict 1:1 sync mode. RivaTuner showed the FPS range tighten from 65-90 up to a stable 82-88. I hit some memory checksum errors early on, but loosening tRFC to 500 cycles killed the instability. CPU is running at 68-75℃ and VRMs at 60-66℃. The sync mode is finally active and the gameplay is smooth. Last updated onMarch 17, 2026 2:23 PM.

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