The optimization in this game feels like it's from the stone age. I have a beast of a 9070 XT, yet it just crashes at the loading screen—completely ridiculous. The Vastarmor RX 9070 XT Super Alloy was hitting a conflict with the old engine's API calls, causing a multi-threading crash and an illegal memory access in 0.5ms. I tried lowering the graphics settings, but that just made the game look like a PS2 title and didn't stop the crashes, which was a waste of time. I finally went into the config files, forced multi-threaded rendering to 0, and disabled Radeon Anti-Lag in the driver. The 0x0000005 error in Event Viewer totally disappeared, and I've played for five hours straight without a single pop-up. CPU usage spiked by 20% after disabling multi-threading, but tweaking the process priority smoothed it out. GPU temp is 62-68℃ with VRAM at 6-8GB. The stability is finally locked in at 62-68℃. Last updated onApril 10, 2026 7:40 PM.
Walking through quiet indoor hallways should be easy, but I kept feeling this slight, annoying hitch in the movement. I checked the logs and found the Gainward RTX 5070 Ti Storm OC was being way too aggressive with power saving—the clock would tank from 2100MHz to 400MHz instantly, making the FPS swing between 45 and 80. I tried turning off V-Sync, but that just gave me screen tearing, which was a poor trade-off. I went into the NVIDIA Control Panel, switched Power Management to Prefer Maximum Performance, and used a tool to lock the minimum core clock at 1200MHz. The RivaTuner frame time graph flattened from a 10-30ms mess to a clean 12-15ms. My idle power draw went up by 15W, but adjusting the fan stop threshold made it a non-issue. GPU temp is now 58-64℃ with fans at 1200 RPM. Frame times are finally locked at 12-15ms. Last updated onApril 8, 2026 8:32 AM.
Seeing thousands of Roman soldiers clash is an epic sight, but it was ruined by these random, jarring freezes. The Sapphire RX 7800 XT Polar Edition was struggling with Vulkan API calls, causing the frame time to jump from 12ms to a hideous 85ms. I tried the latest Beta drivers first, but that was a mistake—it just led to constant driver timeouts, which was incredibly frustrating. I used DDU to wipe everything clean, rolled back to the previous stable version, and manually purged 4.2GB of shader cache. RTSS showed the frame times settling back to 13-16ms, and the stuttering vanished. The game took an extra 20 seconds to launch after the rollback, but that went away once the shaders recompiled. GPU temp is steady at 61-67℃ with VRAM usage between 10.5-12.1GB. The render interface is finally switched and stable at 10.5-12.1GB. Last updated onMarch 22, 2026 8:33 AM.
The texture streaming in this game is a joke; walls just turn black and then pop back in. My 16GB of VRAM was getting absolutely hammered, hovering between 15.2-15.8GB, and as soon as it topped out, the FPS plummeted. I tried dropping the resolution to 1080p, but it looked like a blurry mess, which was just depressing. I ended up manually locking my virtual memory (page file) to 32GB and dropping the texture filtering from 16x to 8x. Monitoring with GPU-Z, the VRAM usage finally stabilized between 13.1-14.2GB, and the flashing stopped entirely. I noticed the system took about 5 seconds longer to boot after the page file change, but disabling Fast Boot fixed that. The GPU is idling at 66-72℃ with fans at 1500 RPM. I exported the memory curves to verify the fix, and the fans are now steady at 1500-1600 RPM. Last updated onMarch 17, 2026 10:08 AM.
Hitting 300km/h and suddenly my screen is covered in these glitchy green pixels—it was honestly stressing me out. The GDDR7 memory on the Manli Star Ship RTX 5090 D v2 OC was hitting 98-105℃ under full load, which is basically the thermal ceiling. I tried lowering shadow quality in-game, but it only dropped the temp by 3℃ and made the game look washed out, which I hated. I went into the control panel and set a super aggressive fan curve, forcing 80% speed as soon as it hits 60℃, and capped the power limit at 420W. HWInfo showed the VRAM temp dropping to 82-88℃, and the flickering vanished. I did have a moment where the case started vibrating like crazy due to the fan turbulence, but slowing down the front intake by 200 RPM quieted it down. The core stays at 64-70℃ with VRAM usage at 85-92%. After 10 benchmark runs, the pixels are clean and the input response feels snappy. Last updated onMarch 2, 2026 4:52 PM.