GamePP Frequently Asked Questions - Professional Hardware Monitoring Software FAQ Knowledge Base

While fighting ghosts in the woods, my CPU temp suddenly spiked to 88℃. That feeling of raw performance turned into pure overheating anxiety instantly. Looking back, the default pump curve on the Valkyrie V360 is way too conservative, running at only 60% power below 70℃, which just lets heat soak into the block. I tried cranking the fans to max via software, but while the radiator cooled down, the core temp stayed high—it was like fanning a feverish person without giving them medicine. I went into the BIOS and switched the pump header from 'Auto' to 'Full Speed' and optimized the front case intake. In HWInfo, the core temps plummeted from 85-92℃ down to 64-71℃, and the frame jitter totally disappeared. I did notice some slight resonance noise when I first maxed the pump, but flipping the radiator orientation fixed it. Water temps are now steady at 32-38℃ with fans at 1100 RPM. Thermal efficiency is up by 25%, though the pump hum is slightly more noticeable in quiet rooms. Last updated onMarch 12, 2026 9:50 AM.

Seeing the gorgeous vistas of this game at 6000MHz is exhilarating, but the random micro-stutters were absolutely killing the vibe. The Gloway Celestial Strategy DDR5 6000 was fluctuating between 4800MHz and 6000MHz, creating abnormal frame time peaks of 10-30ms. I wasted time trying Windows 'Game Mode,' which did absolutely nothing for hardware-level frequency sync. I finally updated my motherboard BIOS to the latest version and enabled the XMP 3.0 profile, locking the voltage at 1.35V. AIDA64 showed read speeds stabilizing at 58-62GB/s, and the micro-stutters completely vanished. One weird thing: my cold boot time increased by about 5 seconds after enabling XMP, but I fixed that by disabling the 'Memory Training' redundancy in BIOS. RAM temps are now steady at 52-58℃ with core voltage between 1.1V-1.2V. I ran three full passes of MemTest86 with zero errors. It's rock solid now, though the boot time trade-off is something to watch. Last updated onMarch 20, 2026 10:22 AM.

Entering a busy town center felt like the screen was twitching, and this weird choppiness was obvious even at 1080P. The power delivery on this Onda A520 is pretty rough; the core voltage was swinging wildly between 1.1V and 1.3V, triggering constant CPU throttling. I tried the High Performance power plan first, but the CPU just hit 95℃ while the stutters remained—totally disappointing. I went into the BIOS, set a manual CPU voltage offset of +0.05V, and tweaked the fan curve to hit 100% at 70℃. Monitoring showed the voltage swing dropped from 0.2V to 0.06V, and that annoying twitching stopped. I had a bit of a boot delay after the offset change, but disabling Fast Boot sorted it out. CPU now stays at 68-75℃ and VRMs are at 70-78℃. Frame time analysis confirms the drops are gone, with a steady 5.1-6.4ms generation time. Last updated onMarch 2, 2026 1:19 PM.

My teammates would be mid-fight while I was still staring at a 60% loading bar, which made me desperately want to upgrade my gear. The Intel 760P 1TB just can't keep up with modern open-world I/O, with wait times hitting 150-220ms. I tried dropping the game to lowest settings, but the load time didn't budge—it just looked like a pixelated mess, like putting tractor tires on a Ferrari. I used a priority tool to set the game's disk I/O to 'Realtime' and disabled Windows Defender's real-time scanning for the game folder. In Resource Monitor, disk active time dropped from 98% to 75%, and load times went from 45 seconds down to 18. I got a security warning at first, but adding the game to the exclusion list silenced it. Temps are cool at 38-45℃ with 80% load. Performance curves show a 40% efficiency boost; the mode switch worked. Last updated onMarch 27, 2026 4:05 PM.

That feeling where you press a button and the character reacts half a second later is absolutely lethal in an action game. The USB controller on the Jginyue B760M Gaming D4 had polling intervals swinging between 8-15ms, creating a noticeable delay. I tried swapping between USB 2.0 and 3.0 ports, but the lag followed me everywhere—I actually started thinking my keyboard was dying. I finally forced XHCI mode on in the BIOS and disabled 'USB selective suspend' in the Device Manager. My input lag tester showed response times drop from 18-25ms to a crisp 4-7ms, and the combos suddenly felt fluid. I did have a brief issue where my wireless mouse kept disconnecting after the XHCI tweak, but a driver update sorted it out. The board core is at 45-52℃ and the IO area is 58-63℃. The system panel confirms the response mode is optimized, though the RAM is running a bit warm at 58-63℃. Last updated onMarch 27, 2026 8:21 PM.

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