I couldn't take it anymore. This drive just can't handle the assets of the Remake; the moment I enter a forest, the game just hitches. The random read performance of the 760P was hitting 20-30ms scheduling delays with 4K textures, causing frame times to spike between 28-45ms. I tried disabling unnecessary Windows services, but that just made the whole OS feel sluggish—a total waste of my afternoon. I eventually installed the latest Intel storage drivers and manually locked the virtual memory to 16GB to stop disk fragmentation from ruining the experience. RTSS showed my 1% lows jump from 38 FPS to 50 FPS, and the response finally felt stable. I actually had a few random reboots after the driver install, and I had to roll back to a slightly older stable version to stop the crashing. Temps stayed around 42-48℃. I've backed up the config file just in case. Last updated onMay 1, 2026 8:59 PM.
I couldn't take it anymore—this RAM was hitting a wall with Tekken 8's requirements, causing frame drops exactly when a hit should land. The bandwidth on the Kingston Fury 8GB DDR3 1866 was saturated at over 95% during high-res texture loads, causing frame times to jump between 25-45ms. I tried increasing the virtual memory to 32GB, but that was a total fail—it just spiked my disk writes and made the whole system sluggish. I eventually went into the BIOS and tightened the timings from 10-10-10-30 down to 9-9-9-28, while bumping the voltage to 1.65V. RTSS showed my minimums climb from 42 FPS to 55 FPS, and the input felt much more consistent. I did have a few random reboots when I first pushed for 9-9-9, but loosening tRCD to 10 found the sweet spot. RAM temps sat between 48-55℃. Exported the BIOS profile to back up the settings. Still, 8GB is a struggle for 2026 titles. Last updated onApril 29, 2026 4:12 PM.
It was unbearable; the board was choking on the fragmented resource loads of the Remake, causing a noticeable hitch every few seconds. The PCIe lanes on the MAXSUN MS-Challenger B850M-K had a handshake latency of 12-20ms with my NVMe SSD, which translated directly into in-game stutters. I tried increasing the virtual memory in Windows, but that just bloated the disk writes and pushed the SSD temp to 65℃—a complete waste of time. I eventually went into the BIOS and forced the PCIe link mode to Gen4 instead of 'Auto' and updated the chipset drivers. CrystalDiskMark showed random read latency drop from 15ms to 8-11ms, and the transitions became buttery smooth. I actually had a moment where the SSD wasn't detected after the change, but a quick reseat and BIOS update fixed it. Board temps are now 42-48℃. I backed up the BIOS profile, and fans are steady at 1800-2100RPM. Last updated onApril 25, 2026 10:02 AM.
It was honestly unwatchable. I'm using a 5070 Ti, but with DLSS on, the distant stone textures looked like they were smeared with oil. The core clock on the ZOTAC RTX 5070 Ti 16GB is high, but the sampling algorithm was over-smoothing the complex geometry, killing all the sharpness. I tried switching DLSS from Quality to Ultra Quality, but my FPS tanked from 110 to 75 and the blur was still there—a complete waste of time. I ended up downloading the NVIDIA Image Scaling tool, pushed the sharpening intensity to 65%, and locked the render scale to 110% in the game settings. Comparing screenshots, the jagged edges were gone and the carvings on the stones finally looked crisp again. I tried pushing it to 80% sharpening, but that created these ugly white halos around objects, so I backed it off to 65% for a natural look. VRAM usage is steady at 11.2-13.5GB, and core temps are 64-70℃. I've backed up the config file so I don't have to do this again. Last updated onApril 24, 2026 7:13 PM.
It's honestly frustrating—this cooler let my system stutter like crazy in city centers, and the experience was just awful. The RT620 ARGB is decent, but the default sync policy is too slow to react, letting CPU temps swing between 85-91℃. I tried using software to force all fans to sync, but it created a weird resonance in the chassis, and the FPS kept jumping between 60 and 45. I was beyond annoyed. I eventually ditched the software sync and set independent temperature trigger points for each fan in the BIOS, moving the max speed threshold up to 75℃. RTSS shows the frame rate is finally stable at 60-65 FPS, with temps pinned at 72-78℃. While cleaning the cooler, I found the exhaust was clogged with dust, which had killed my airflow by about 20%; a blast of compressed air fixed that. Memory temps are now 42-48℃. I've saved the BIOS config and exported it as a backup file. Last updated onApril 27, 2026 10:36 AM.