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

Referencing report 2026-04-D on Windows 11 23H2, the Kingbank RAM throughput in CrystalDiskMark fluctuated between 5.5 GB/s and 7.1 GB/s. I felt micro-stutters every time a new scene loaded. To see if the hardware was actually the bottleneck, I ran a 3DMark stress test, and the score variance was a shocking 14%, showing a huge gap between benchmarks and real-world feel. I used Novabench to lock the queue depth and compared it with Unigine Heaven under the same load. After adjusting the frequency, CrystalDiskMark throughput converged to 5.9 - 6.7 GB/s, and the tearing stopped. Blender Benchmark finally aligned the data with the actual experience. Even with the numbers looking good, the bandwidth still struggles in massive battles, causing the minimum FPS to dip slightly. Last updated onMarch 31, 2026 1:42 PM.

Based on test report 2026-01-A running Windows 11 24H2, I noticed the Jingyue B760M GAMING D4 background processes swinging wildly between 14.3% and 19.5% in the GamePP resource tracker during puzzle sequences. I first tried expanding the virtual memory, but it was a total waste of time—the frame time graph still looked like a jagged mountain range. I decided to dive into the BIOS, navigated to Advanced -> Power Management and Process Scheduling, and forced non-critical services to low priority. Checking HWiNFO again, the bandwidth usage finally settled between 14.2% and 17.4%, and GamePP showed a steady 64 - 70 FPS. That annoying sticky feeling in my fingertips is finally gone. That said, during a few complex trigger events, peak loads still hit 19.0%, proving the board's native scheduling logic has some stubborn limitations. Last updated onFebruary 9, 2026 9:47 AM.

Based on visual report 05 on Windows 11 23H2, this usually happens when the sharpening strength clashes with your resolution. In high-contrast spots, like the desert at noon, over-sharpening creates a ton of visual noise. I went into the NVIDIA Filter panel and slowly dialed the sharpening down from 50% to about 35% - 38%, while also dropping the Detail Enhancement by 10%. GPU-Z showed the memory clock holding steady at 2100MHz, with core temps between 68℃ - 73℃ and a peak of 77℃. Now the edges look soft and natural instead of looking like they were cut with a knife, and it's within 5% of professional calibration standards. Just keep in mind that in rainy weather, lower sharpening can make distant vistas look a bit blurry, so it's a trade-off between clarity and comfort. Last updated onMarch 25, 2026 12:33 PM.

According to hardware report 06 on Windows 11, I tried a comparative approach to fix this. I started with GPU driver updates, but HWiNFO showed the CPU L3 cache hit rate was swinging wildly between 85% - 88%, which pointed straight to a memory scheduling issue. I dove into BIOS $ ightarrow$ Memory Settings, locked the frequency at 5200MHz, and tightened the timings. After that, the cache hit rate stabilized in the 92% - 96% range, with core voltage sitting at 1.18V - 1.24V. The micro-stutters during scene transitions are gone and the input feels silky smooth, matching public benchmarks within 4%. One downside: this board has a pretty basic power delivery system, and the VRMs hit 95℃ under heavy load, which might cause a very rare instant frame drop. Last updated onMarch 24, 2026 4:48 PM.

Based on thermal report 07 on Windows 11 24H2, this was a struggle. At first, I just set the fans to 100% in the software. Sure, temps dropped to 72℃, but the noise was like a jet engine taking off in my room—totally unbearable. I decided to manually map a stepped curve in BIOS $ ightarrow$ Fan Control: 30% speed below 60℃, then a sharp ramp-up to 75% once it hits 80℃. I ran a 30-minute OCCT stress test and found the full-load temp stayed between 78℃ - 83℃, peaking at 86℃, with noise staying under 42dB. After three test loops, the frame rate variance dropped to within 3fps, which is about 6% off the manufacturer's spec. Even so, in the peak of summer, it still occasionally hits 88℃, which just proves the stock heatsinks on this board are pretty minimal. Last updated onMarch 1, 2026 3:29 PM.

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