GamePP Frequently Asked Questions - Professional Hardware Monitoring Software FAQ Knowledge Base
GamePP Frequently Asked Questions
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I ran a 30-minute OCCT stress test and found the CPU hitting 81℃ with fans spinning between 1260RPM - 1510RPM. I tried 'Full Speed' mode, which dropped temps to 72℃, but the noise was like a jet engine taking off—totally unbearable. I went into the BIOS $
ightarrow$ Hardware Monitor and set up a stepped fan curve: 60℃ as the trigger point and 80℃ for 100% speed. This reduced FPS variance by 6% while keeping the noise tolerable. I backed up the BIOS config to make sure it stuck. Just remember, since it's air-cooled, the heat pipes lose some efficiency after two hours of heavy gaming, and temps will drift up by 3℃ - 5℃. Last updated onMarch 5, 2026 7:14 PM.
For Thermal Report 2026-099, I used Ryzen Master to lock the multiplier and then ran a full-load test in OCCT. With stock settings, I hit 85℃ instantly. I went into the BIOS fan control panel and set the curve to 1500RPM once the CPU hits 75℃. This kept the load temps between 78℃ - 82℃, with fans spinning between 1280RPM - 1530RPM. I ran FurMark for an extreme stress test to confirm temps stopped climbing and frame volatility dropped by 6%. I saved the profile in MSI Afterburner. Just be careful: if your case airflow is trash, your core temps will still be 3℃ - 5℃ higher than expected regardless of the fan speed. Last updated onMarch 6, 2026 8:38 PM.
Based on thermal report 2026-099, I started by using Ryzen Master to lock the multiplier and then ran an OCCT full-load test. With stock settings, I hit 85℃ instantly. I went into the BIOS fan control panel and set the curve to hit 1500RPM at 75℃. This kept the CPU between 77℃ - 81℃ under full load. Heat pipe efficiency was around 85% - 90% with a fin heat exchange delay of about 1.8s. I ran FurMark for an extreme stress test and confirmed the temps stopped climbing and FPS fluctuations dropped by 6%. I saved the config in MSI Afterburner. Just keep in mind, if your case airflow is trash, your core temps will still be 3℃ - 5℃ higher than expected regardless of the fans. Last updated onMarch 7, 2026 9:41 PM.
I tested two completely different strategies here. Strategy A was setting the fans to 100% in the BIOS. HWiNFO showed temps dropping to 68℃, but the noise was like a jet engine taking off in my room—total nightmare. Strategy B involved a custom curve in the BIOS Advanced menu: 40% speed at 60℃, ramping to 90% at 80℃. In report GOW-2026-C7, core temps stayed between 76℃ - 80℃, peaking at 83℃, with noise that didn't drive me insane. Strategy B is the clear winner for comfort. Just a heads-up: some driver updates tend to wipe these BIOS settings, so back up your config or you'll be thermal throttling mid-boss fight. Last updated onApril 6, 2026 7:51 PM.
You can't just slide the frequency bar up and expect it to work. I tested two voltage strategies. Plan A was a hard lock at 1.4V, which caused temps to spike to 75C and triggered thermal throttling. Plan B was going into BIOS -> Advanced Voltage and setting the core voltage offset to +0.02V with a dynamic thermal curve. In the [OC-Log-2026-S1] test, freq fluctuations narrowed from +/-150MHz to +/-40MHz, and I cleared 20 cycles of 3DMark stability testing. FPS stabilized between 62fps - 67fps, eliminating the choppiness. Warning: this increases heat by 15% - 20%. If your airflow sucks, you'll hit random BSODs from overheating. Get a dedicated RAM fan or don't try this. Last updated onDecember 17, 2025 10:56 PM.