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Report #05 on Windows 11 23H2 using GPU-Z showed controller temps between 52-57℃ with peak bandwidth at 3.9GB/s. I opened the NVIDIA Filter panel and dropped the sharpening strength to a 30% - 40% range, combining it with a contrast mask. The transitions became natural, and FPS fluctuations stayed within +/- 2.4 frames. While it looks great, fast scene changes still cause tiny freezes due to the physical throughput limits of the PCIe 4.0 lane. This proves that filters only fix the 'look'—they can't erase the instant latency of the storage device during extreme random reads. Last updated onMarch 27, 2026 2:39 PM.

Based on Report #01 under Windows 11 24H2, HWiNFO showed memory clocks fluctuating between 5950-6050MHz with package temps hitting 62℃ during scene swaps. I navigated to Task Manager -> Details, right-clicked the game process, and set priority to High to force background services to step back. This dropped frame times from 45ms to 16ms, staying within 3% of public benchmarks. While switching the Power Plan to High Performance helped, memory read pressure still jittered between 13% - 18% during monster swarms, causing occasional hitches. It makes the game feel way more responsive, but it's not a magic bullet for extreme asset streaming—I'd suggest pairing this with low texture streaming settings. Last updated onMarch 1, 2026 8:42 AM.

Looking at Report #02 on Windows 11 24H2 using AIDA64, memory clocks were steady at 6350-6450MHz, but core voltage was jumping between 1.35V - 1.42V, causing constant component timeout errors in the system logs. I ran the System File Checker (SFC /scannow) to force-restore DirectX integrity and disabled real-time antivirus scanning. This boosted scene response speeds by 18% - 25%, with memory latency stabilizing at 16-19ns over three reboot cycles. Even so, at Ultra settings, I still notice tiny screen tears due to VRAM bottlenecks, proving that software fixes can't bypass the physical limits of the hardware. Last updated onMarch 31, 2026 10:18 PM.

The stuttering in this game was driving me insane. In the environment described in report 2026-055, I tried updating drivers first, but it did absolutely nothing. Out of desperation, I opened the HWiNFO64 sensor page and saw core temps fluctuating between 69℃ - 74℃, but the L3 cache hit rate was jumping wildly between 92% - 96%. I tried killing every single background monitoring tool, and suddenly frame delivery latency dropped by 10% - 15%, and the tearing vanished. AIDA64 confirmed core voltage was holding at 1.17V - 1.27V, and the 3D V-Cache was indeed boosting frames by about 14% - 19%. After three reboots, it was clear the monitoring software was conflicting and causing cache jitter. Naval battles are smooth now, but with massive wave physics, the CPU load is still immense, and I still get the occasional 1-frame micro-stutter. Last updated onMarch 27, 2026 7:46 PM.

Dealing with the heat issues in report 2026-019, I compared two cooling strategies. Option A was setting the fans to 100% in the BIOS; while it brought the CPU load temp down to around 70℃, the noise was unbearable. Option B involved going into the BIOS, navigating to Advanced $ ightarrow$ Fan Control, and setting a linear growth curve for the 60℃ - 80℃ range, keeping fan speeds between 1270RPM - 1520RPM. After a 30-minute stress test, core temps stabilized at 77℃ - 81℃, with heat pipe efficiency between 85% - 90%. Option B managed to reduce frame variance by 6% - 9% while keeping the noise levels tolerable. It's stable for now, but since this is an air cooler, if the room temp hits over 30℃ in the summer, the core will still climb to 85℃, which triggers slight thermal throttling. Last updated onMarch 4, 2026 6:27 PM.

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