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

This Onda board basically has a meltdown under heavy 3D rendering; it would just crash every 30 minutes. Event Viewer was flooded with memory management errors, and it was clear the memory controller couldn't handle 6000MHz. I tried enabling 'Memory Enhancement' in the BIOS, but that was a disaster—it actually made the crashes happen every 10 minutes instead of every hour. I eventually dropped the RAM frequency to 5600MHz, set the SoC voltage to a manual 1.2V, and loosened the tRFC timings. After that, Prime95 ran for 12 hours straight without a single error, and the game stopped crashing. I lost about 4ns of latency, but honestly, you can't feel that in-game, and stability is way more important. RAM is now 45-51℃ and VRMs are 65-72℃. I used the board's export tool to save these BIOS settings, and the RAM temp is staying at 45-51℃. Last updated onApril 27, 2026 10:20 PM.

It's like an unwritten rule that SSDs slow down once they're full, and it's honestly pathetic. The QLC NAND in the Intel 760P 2TB saw read speeds tank from 3000MB/s to 1100MB/s, pushing boot times from 15s to a miserable 40s. I tried some 'SSD booster' software, but it just ate CPU cycles without doing anything—complete garbage. I manually triggered a full-drive TRIM and nuked about 200GB of temp cache files. Benchmark tests showed sequential reads bouncing back to 2800-3100MB/s, and the game boots normally again. The system hung for a few seconds right after the TRIM, but a reboot cleared it up. Drive temps are chill at 38-45℃. The response time is finally snappy, though I'll never trust QLC drives for main installs again. Last updated onApril 16, 2026 5:58 PM.

Tearing down the highway in Mexico and the game just freezes solid. It's enough to make me want to throw the RAM out the window. The Gloway Dragon Warrior Yi 6000MHz was running at 1.35V, but during heavy read/write switches, I saw transient drops of 0.05V that just hung the system. I tried disabling hardware acceleration in Windows, but that didn't stop the freezes and actually cost me 10 FPS—a complete disaster. I went into the BIOS and manually locked both VDD and VDDQ to 1.40V, while pinning the SoC voltage at 1.25V. I ran Prime95 for 4 hours straight and didn't see a single error; the freezes are gone. I actually tried 1.45V at first, but the RAM hit 65℃ and triggered thermal throttling, so I backed it off to 1.40V for the sweet spot. Temps are now stable at 54-59℃ with fans at 1600 RPM. I saved the profile using the motherboard export tool, and temps are holding at 54-59℃. Last updated onApril 5, 2026 9:36 PM.

This H610M board is a joke when it comes to handling high-frequency RAM; I was getting a random crash every half hour. The system logs were a sea of memory management errors, proving the controller was on the edge of collapse at 3200 MHz. I tried enabling 'Memory Enhanced Mode' in the BIOS, which was a disaster—it actually increased the crash rate from once an hour to once every ten minutes. I felt like I was losing my mind. Eventually, I downclocked the RAM to 2666 MHz, set the SoC voltage to a fixed 1.1V, and loosened the tRFC timings. After that, Prime95 ran for twelve straight hours without a single error, and Genshin stopped crashing entirely. Sure, I lost about 5ns of latency, but in actual gameplay, I can't feel the difference, and stability is way more important than a few nanoseconds. RAM temps are 42 - 48℃, and the VRM is at 60 - 66℃. I used the board's export tool to back up these settings, and the 60 - 66℃ VRM temp is consistent. Last updated onApril 28, 2026 11:08 AM.

The default VRAM scheduling on this card is a complete joke; push the settings a bit and it just starts choking. In 4K mode, the Vastarmor RX 9060 XT's VRAM usage was swinging wildly between 13.5-15.2 GB, causing the memory controller to lag by 18-26 ms, which tanked my FPS from 80 down to 30. I tried 'Performance Enhance' in the driver, but it didn't stabilize anything—it actually started BSOD-ing my system every two hours. I finally manually locked my system pagefile to 32 GB and optimized the VRAM pre-allocation weights. Continuous monitoring in GPU-Z showed the memory clock stabilize at 2200 MHz instead of fluctuating around 2000 MHz, and the drops vanished. My load times increased by about 2 seconds after the pagefile change, but moving the file to a high-speed NVMe partition fixed that. GPU temps are holding at 65-72°C, and the response time is now lightning fast. Last updated onApril 26, 2026 5:47 PM.

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