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

Whenever I'm clashing with a massive machine, my FPS suddenly tanks from 110 down to 45, which is absolutely jarring. The default power delivery on the Maxsun B850M WIFI ICE is a mess during high-frequency transient responses, with Vcore bouncing wildly between 1.22V and 1.38V. I tried enabling the High Performance power plan in Windows, but that actually made the stuttering worse—software tweaks are useless against hardware-level instability. I eventually dove into the BIOS Advanced settings and bumped the LLC (Load Line Calibration) from Level 3 to Level 5, while locking the PL1 power limit at 125W. After running an AIDA64 FPU stress test, the voltage ripple shrank from 0.16V to a tight 0.03V, and the screen tearing completely vanished. I did hit a wall early on when I tried an aggressive undervolt that triggered a kernel security check failure and a BSOD; I had to back the offset off to -0.05V to get it stable. Now, VRM temps sit between 72-78℃ with fans at 1600 RPM. Checking the motherboard control panel, the voltage curve is finally a flat line, and frame times are rock steady at 5.1-6.4ms. Last updated onFebruary 11, 2026 8:59 AM.

While exploring the complex landscapes of the Realm of Shadow, I noticed my frame times were jumping wildly between 12ms and 35ms. Even though the WD SN850X has a beastly SLC cache, the I/O response time occasionally spiked to 18ms during fragmented asset loads, causing those micro-stutters. I initially tried increasing the virtual memory in Windows, but that was a total waste of time—it didn't stop the stuttering and actually added about 5 seconds to my loading screens, which was beyond frustrating. I eventually installed the latest official Western Digital drivers and manually disabled the Windows write-caching policy to force real-time data writes. In CrystalDiskMark, my random 4K reads tightened up from 62ms to a steady 45-52ms, and the in-game hitches completely vanished. Interestingly, after the first cache tweak, I hit two recognition delays during bootup, which I only fixed after setting the PCIe Power Management to 'Maximum Performance'. The SSD now sits comfortably between 42-50℃, and the heatsink feels warm to the touch. I've logged these optimized read/write parameters in the driver dashboard, and the storage strategy is now locked in. Last updated onFebruary 8, 2026 7:15 PM.

Whenever I unleashed a massive area-of-effect spell, the frame rate would just tank out of nowhere, which was incredibly frustrating. Looking at the logs, the VRM on the Biostar H310MHD3 was struggling with modern 3A loads, with temps hovering between 85°C and 92°C, causing a sudden 0.04V Vcore drop. I first tried switching Windows to High Performance mode, but that was a disaster; temps hit 100°C and triggered thermal throttling immediately. I then dove into the BIOS, navigated to Advanced → CPU Configuration → Voltage, and set the CPU Offset Voltage to +0.06V, while shortening the fan response time to 0.5 seconds. Monitoring via HWiNFO showed the voltage curve flatten out, and frame times dropped from a shaky 22-40ms to a consistent 14-18ms. I actually messed up early on by lowering the power limit, which caused the game to crash constantly until I bumped the voltage back up and fixed the airflow. Now, core temps stay between 78°C and 84°C. Stress tests confirmed a 12% boost in 1% lows, with frame times locked at 14-18ms on Win11 24H2. Last updated onFebruary 7, 2026 6:14 PM.

Walking through those creepy Ishimura corridors was a nightmare because the screen kept tearing for a few milliseconds, making my inputs feel sluggish and disconnected. Even though the Zotac RTX 5060 Ti 16GB has plenty of VRAM, the memory controller was hitting erratic voltage swings between 1.1V and 1.2V while pushing high-res textures. I tried slapping on 'Prefer Maximum Performance' in the Nvidia Control Panel, but that actually made the stuttering worse—classic case of software tweaks failing against hardware-level instability. I eventually used a tuning tool to lock the memory clock at 2100MHz and tweaked the shader cache allocation weights in the registry. Checking RTSS, the frame time variance shrunk from a messy 12-35ms down to a rock steady 8-11ms, and the tearing just vanished. I did have a moment of panic when an aggressive overclock triggered a memory checksum error and black-screened my rig, but dialing the voltage back by 0.02V fixed it. Core temps stayed between 62-68℃ with fans at 1400 RPM. The frequency curve is finally a flat line, and the 8-11ms frame time is consistent. Last updated onFebruary 11, 2026 1:30 PM.

Whenever my base gets crowded with Pal, the gameplay suddenly hitches, which is incredibly frustrating given the hardware. Even with the massive bandwidth of the Gainward RTX 5080 Storm OC, the driver resource scheduling was showing abnormal spikes of 14-22ms during dynamic model loads. I first tried dropping texture quality to Medium; while I gained about 10 FPS, the visuals looked washed out, and I hated that compromise. I eventually dove into the NVIDIA Control Panel, set Power Management to 'Prefer Maximum Performance', and manually locked the memory clock at 21Gbps. Checking RTSS, the frame times collapsed from a wild 18-35ms swing down to a rock-steady 9-13ms. I actually wasted an hour increasing the page file size first, which just made the whole system feel sluggish until I killed all background bloatware. GPU temps stayed between 64-70℃ with fans humming at 1600 RPM. A 3DMark storage benchmark confirmed throughput is back to peak, with frame times locked at 9-13ms. Last updated onFebruary 14, 2026 7:55 PM.

Back to Top