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

During massive team raids, my PC would just reboot without any warning. It's honestly ridiculous that 64GB of RAM could be this unstable. The Corsair Vengeance DDR5 6000 was suffering from a 0.06V voltage dip during peak loads, which just hung the whole system. I tried disabling hardware acceleration in Windows, but that was a total waste of time—it didn't stop the reboots and actually cost me 12 FPS. I went into the BIOS, pushed VDD to 1.38V, and locked the SoC at 1.20V. Prime95 ran for 5 hours without a single hiccup, and the reboots stopped completely. I did hit a snag when I tried 1.42V; temps soared to 68℃ and the system throttled hard. 1.38V is the magic number. Temps now sit at 54-60℃ with fans at 1500 RPM. I saved the profile using the motherboard export tool, and the input lag is finally gone. It's a bit of a hassle to tune, but it's the only way. Last updated onApril 29, 2026 3:54 PM.

The second I called in an orbital strike, my frame rate felt like a roller coaster, swinging from 80 down to 20 FPS—it was insane. Once the SLC cache on the Zhitai TiPro9000 2TB filled up, the write speed plummeted from 7000MB/s to around 1200MB/s, which completely choked the asset streaming. I first tried the 'High Performance' power plan, but that just pushed the drive temps to 72℃—totally useless. I ended up clearing 300GB of junk to keep the free space above 30% and manually forced a TRIM command to clear out the flash blocks. In 3DMark storage tests, random read latency dropped from 1.5ms to 0.8-1.1ms, and the stutters vanished. I had a bit of a system freeze right after the TRIM, but it cleared up after ten minutes of background processing. Temps are now 45-52℃. Backed up the config, and the loading is finally instant. Last updated onApril 28, 2026 9:41 PM.

Every time I triggered a massive explosion in the jungle, the game would hitch every 15 seconds—it was honestly pathetic. The timings on the Kingston HyperX Savage DDR4 2400 were clashing with the motherboard's memory controller, causing read instructions to pile up in the queue and spiking response times to over 120ms. I tried setting the game to 'High Priority' in Task Manager, but the memory usage kept jumping wildly and the hitches didn't budge—totally useless. I took the nuclear option: disabled XMP entirely in the BIOS and manually forced a 1:1 divider mode. HWInfo showed the memory latency stabilize from 85 - 110ns down to 72 - 78ns, and the battlefield finally felt smooth. After killing XMP, the clock dropped to 2133MHz, so I had to manually pull it back to 2400MHz and tweak the voltage to get it stable. RAM temps are sitting at 40 - 46℃. I've exported the config file so I don't have to do this again, and latency is holding at 72 - 78ns. Last updated onApril 27, 2026 5:56 PM.

When trying to hit a fast flick shot, the frame rate feels like a rollercoaster, swinging from 140 FPS down to 60 FPS—it's absolutely insane. The G.Skill Trident Z Royal DDR5 7200 was showing 25-35ms of voltage ripple, which caused tiny jitters in the CPU internal clock and triggered sync errors. I first tried the High Performance power plan in Windows, but that just pushed memory temps to 65℃, which felt like a total scam. I eventually flashed the latest stable BIOS and set a memory voltage offset of -0.02V to keep the heat in check. In AIDA64, the voltage swing narrowed from 0.12V to 0.06V, and the stuttering completely stopped. I did have a brief moment where the RAM wasn't detected after the BIOS flash, but reseating the sticks and clearing the CMOS solved it. Memory temps now stay between 55-62℃. I used a config export tool to back up these verified voltage and BIOS settings, and the temps are holding at 55-62℃. Last updated onApril 29, 2026 12:48 PM.

When trying to hit a fast flick shot, the frame rate feels like a rollercoaster, swinging from 140 FPS down to 60 FPS—it's absolutely insane. The G.Skill Trident Z Royal DDR5 7200 was showing 25-35ms of voltage ripple, which caused tiny jitters in the CPU internal clock and triggered sync errors. I first tried the High Performance power plan in Windows, but that just pushed memory temps to 65℃, which felt like a total scam. I eventually flashed the latest stable BIOS and set a memory voltage offset of -0.02V to keep the heat in check. In AIDA64, the voltage swing narrowed from 0.12V to 0.06V, and the stuttering completely stopped. I did have a brief moment where the RAM wasn't detected after the BIOS flash, but reseating the sticks and clearing the CMOS solved it. Memory temps now stay between 55-62℃. I used a config export tool to back up these verified voltage and BIOS settings, and the temps are holding at 55-62℃. Last updated onApril 29, 2026 12:48 PM.

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