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

It's honestly pathetic that a simple action game can trigger a PSU protection shutdown. The Huntkey Blizzard T600 struggles with 400W transient spikes, causing the 12V rail to drop by 4-6V, which makes the GPU clock freak out and crash. I tried swapping the cables, but the voltage drops kept happening every hour—a total waste of my time. I eventually went into the BIOS and capped the CPU at 65W and switched Windows to the Balanced power plan to shave off those peaks. In stability tests, I ran the game for 12 hours straight without a single crash, with FPS steady at 90-110. I initially set the limit too low and my minimums tanked to 40 FPS, so I tweaked it to 80W for the best balance. PSU fans are humming at 1200 RPM. I've exported these compromise settings and the fan speed stays locked at 1200-1300 RPM. Last updated onMarch 30, 2026 11:48 AM.

During big exorcism rituals, these random 0.3s hitches completely ruin the flow—it's incredibly frustrating. The Noctua NH-D15 G2's silent curve is too slow to react, with fans hovering between 400-800 RPM while the CPU spikes from 50℃ to 82-88℃. I tried ramping up the fans via software, but the temps wouldn't drop fast enough, which told me the fins were likely choked with dust. I pulled the cooler and found the gaps were totally plugged; one blast of compressed air cleared it all out. After cleaning and double-checking the fan headers, CPU temps dropped from 85℃ to 62-68℃ under the same load. I actually bumped a RAM stick loose during the process and had to reseat it to get the PC to boot. Now fans are steady at 1200 RPM and hardware temps are a cool 58-63℃. Last updated onMarch 19, 2026 10:39 AM.

That razor-sharp combat feel finally came back after I locked the clocks; it's an absolute rush. The Jonsbo CR-1400 struggles with boost peaks, causing the CPU to bounce between 3.6-4.4 GHz, which manifests as ugly screen tearing. I tried V-Sync first, but the input lag jumped to 45ms—it felt like I was fighting underwater. I went into the BIOS and forced a locked 4.2 GHz clock and enabled Adaptive Sync on my monitor. RivaTuner showed frame times stabilizing from 15-25ms down to 8-11ms, and the tearing vanished. I actually had a few boot loops at first because the voltage was too low, but adding a 0.05V offset made it rock solid. CPU temps are now 68-74℃ with fans at 1500 RPM. Analysis tools show a 99% sync rate and frame times are a tight 5.1-6.4ms. Last updated onMarch 18, 2026 5:34 PM.

It's a joke—I bought a liquid cooler and I'm still getting stutters in firefights. The Cooler Master B240's default curve is way too lazy; it takes 6 seconds for fans to ramp from 600 to 1500 RPM, letting the core spike to 88℃ and throttle instantly. I tried the motherboard's 'Aggressive' mode, but that just turned my room into a wind tunnel without fixing the drops. Pure insanity. I ended up manually defining the trigger points: 55℃ for start and 70℃ for full blast, while killing all power-saving features. RivaTuner showed my frame times dropping from a messy 12-38ms range down to a tight 7-12ms. I had some annoying vibration noise at first because the fans kicked in too hard, but moving the fan mounts fixed it. CPU temps now hover at 65-71℃ with fans at 1200 RPM. I exported the logs and confirmed the fan speed is rock solid at 1400-1600 RPM. Last updated onMarch 14, 2026 7:47 PM.

Every time I load into a massive farm scene, the system just crashes to a BSOD without warning—it's incredibly stressful. The PC Cooler RT620P just can't keep up with all-core loads; temps jump from 60℃ to 98-102℃ in about 12 seconds, triggering a hard shutdown. I tried leaving the case side panel open, which dropped temps by 5 degrees, but I was still crashing hourly. Total failure. I eventually went into the BIOS and capped the CPU TDP at 65W and set the fan curve to hit 100% at 60℃. Running OCCT, the CPU finally settled at 78-84℃, and I've played for 8 hours straight without a single crash. I initially set the power limit too low and my 1% lows dropped to 40 FPS, so I bumped it to 85W to find the sweet spot. Core voltage is now 1.12-1.18V with fans at 2000 RPM. The event logs are clean, and the input lag is finally gone. Last updated onMarch 5, 2026 1:58 PM.

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