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

This AIO behaves weirdly under load; CPU temps jump violently between 60°C and 95°C, causing the game to crash every ten minutes. Compared to the stability of high-end air coolers, the V360 pump in Auto mode is just not cutting it. I tried limiting the CPU TDP via software, but my FPS got cut in half, which was a total waste of time. I went into the BIOS, switched the pump to Full Speed/Locked, and set the radiator fans to a constant 80% output. The core temps finally stabilized at 68°C - 74°C. I actually overshot the voltage at first, which caused a high-pitched pump whine, but dialing it back to 11.5V hit the sweet spot. The CPU clock is finally steady at 4.8 GHz without those maddening spikes. I exported the BIOS profile to back up this grueling tuning session. Last updated onApril 1, 2026 12:26 PM.

Whenever I trigger those flashy combo attacks, the VRAM usage on my Sapphire RX 7650 GRE jumps wildly between 7.2GB - 7.8GB, causing these brutal 10 FPS stutters that are just infuriating when the specs should be plenty. I first tried lowering the texture filtering, but that just made the game look like mud and didn't fix the lag at all. I eventually went into the driver panel and manually set the shader cache to 'Unlimited,' which slowly brought the frame times down from 35ms to about 16-22ms. Even then, there were these tiny hitches until I locked my system virtual memory to a fixed 16GB range; that's when the VRAM swapping actually calmed down. My GPU core stayed around 64℃ - 70℃ with the fans humming at 1300 RPM. After comparing the throughput across different cache modes, the random read latency dropped significantly, and my frame times finally locked in at 16-22ms. It was a bit of a headache, but it works. Last updated onFebruary 9, 2026 7:50 PM.

This 14600KF is an absolute space heater during heavy physics calcs. Core temps hit 95°C - 98°C, causing the clock speed to tank from 5.3 GHz to 3.8 GHz. It was ridiculous. I tried cranking the fans to max in the BIOS, but it just sounded like a jet engine and the temps barely budged. Total waste of time. I went back into the BIOS and set a negative voltage offset of -0.07V. Watching the load monitor, the power draw dropped from 180W to 155W. I actually crashed three times while finding the stable voltage, and I had to tweak the Load-Line Calibration (LLC) parameters to stop the reboots. Eventually, temps settled at 78°C - 83°C, and the FPS variance stayed within +/- 5 frames. It's a tedious process, but it stopped the thermal throttling, and my case doesn't feel like an oven anymore. I exported all the voltage fluctuation curves via OCCT for the records. Last updated onMarch 2, 2026 1:31 PM.

Seeing memory latency drop from 68ns to 61ns was a huge win; the difference in Nightingale's open world is night and day. When I first enabled the XMP profile, the system would blue screen after ten minutes of gameplay. The memory controller was unstable around 1.2V, which taught me not to trust presets blindly. I manually bumped the SoC voltage to 1.25V and tightened the timings from 36-36-36 to 32-38-32. AIDA64 showed a bandwidth increase of about 4.8 GB/s. I ran into some minor parity errors early on, which I fixed by increasing the DRAM voltage to 1.38V. Now, memory temps stay around 50°C - 55°C, and the game is smooth as silk without any micro-stutters. Squeezing every bit of performance out of this hardware was a struggle, but the FPS gain is real. I switched the memory mode via BIOS to lock it in. Last updated onMarch 25, 2026 3:49 PM.

With CPU temps hovering between 90°C - 95°C, I had to be careful. I first checked if the cooler base was mounted evenly. Looking at the logs, the fans didn't even start ramping up until 70°C, which let heat build up in the core—a fatal flaw when rendering complex terrain. I tried setting the fans to 100% in the BIOS, but the noise hit 45dB and temps only dropped by 2 degrees. That failure showed me the trigger points were the problem. I rebuilt the curve: 60% speed at 60°C and 100% at 80°C. Now, the core stays stable at 72°C - 78°C. I did have some annoying resonance noise at first, but tightening the fan clips fixed it. FPS is now steady at 60-70, and the input lag is gone. I verified the results with a professional temperature logger. Last updated onMarch 31, 2026 3:12 PM.

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