It's absolutely unbearable—having a PCIe 5.0 drive with top-tier speeds only for it to crash every two hours. The Fanxiang S910Max controller runs scorching hot under load, causing the motherboard M.2 power to dip by about 0.05V, which triggers an illegal address access error in the game. I tried updating the BIOS first, but the crashes actually got worse—that 'optimization' was a total disaster. I went into the BIOS voltage settings, changed M.2 power from 'Auto' to 'Manual,' and added a 0.025V offset while forcing Max Performance mode. In an OCCT storage stress test, the system ran for 6 hours straight without a single error. The crashes are gone. I did see the controller temp spike to 82℃ immediately after the voltage bump, so I had to swap in a beefier third-party heatsink to bring it down to 62-68℃. Read speeds are locked at 12000MB/s. Exported the profile via the BIOS save feature to keep it permanent. Last updated onApril 10, 2026 9:23 PM.
It's honestly unbearable. I have these ultra-low C30 timings, yet the game just crashes after three hours of hunting. The default voltage on the Asgard Vengeance II DDR5 6000 C30 fluctuates too much on some boards, causing a momentary voltage drop during heavy load shifts that triggers an illegal memory access error. I tried updating the BIOS to the latest version, but that actually made the crashes happen more often—a total disaster. I went into the BIOS voltage settings and manually locked VDD and VDDQ to 1.42V instead of the 'Auto' 1.35V. I ran Prime95 Large FFTs for 12 hours straight and didn't see a single error; the crashes are completely gone. I did push it to 1.48V once, and the temps spiked to 66℃ immediately, so I backed it off to 1.42V for the best balance. Now, temps stay between 50-56℃ at 6000MHz. I exported the profile to the motherboard's CMOS save to make sure I never have to fight this again. Last updated onApril 14, 2026 2:28 PM.
It's absolutely infuriating. I'm running 6800MHz top-tier RAM, yet the game just dies after three hours. The default voltage on the Kingbank Black Blade is too unstable on some boards, causing transient drops that trigger memory access errors in FiveM plugins. I tried updating the BIOS, but that actually made the crashes more frequent—a total disaster. I went into the voltage settings and manually locked VDD and VDDQ at 1.4V instead of the 'Auto' 1.35V. I ran Prime95 Large FFTs for 12 hours straight with zero errors, and the crashes are completely gone. I tried pushing it to 1.45V once, but the RAM temps spiked to 68℃, so I backed off to 1.4V to find the sweet spot. Now temps stay between 52-58℃ at a rock-steady 6800MHz. I exported the profile to the motherboard so I don't have to do this again. The response time feels snappy now. Last updated onApril 2, 2026 11:37 AM.
It's honestly ridiculous that this board crashes in a lightweight game like Valorant. The VRMs on the ASRock A320M-HDV are basically prehistoric, and after a few matches, the VCORE would randomly drop by 0.05V, triggering a memory access violation. I tried lowering all the graphics settings, and while my FPS went from 144 to 200, the crashes didn't stop—total waste of my life. I finally went into the BIOS voltage menu, switched VCORE to manual, and added a 0.025V offset, while locking the RAM voltage at 1.35V. OCCT ran for 4 hours without a single error. One big problem: the VRM temps hit 88℃ immediately. I had to zip-tie a tiny 4cm fan onto the power phases to bring it down to 72-76℃. Now the CPU stays at 68-75℃. I backed up this profile to a USB drive so I don't lose it. The game finally feels snappy and doesn't crash. Last updated onApril 13, 2026 9:54 PM.
I couldn't stand it anymore—even with low-frequency 4800MHz RAM, the game would just crash after two hours of play. The default voltage on Crucial DDR5 4800 fluctuates too much on some boards, causing transient voltage drops when switching between low and high loads, which triggers the game's memory protection. I tried updating the BIOS to the latest version first, but that was a disaster; the crashes actually happened more often. I eventually went into the BIOS voltage settings and manually locked VDD and VDDQ at 1.2V instead of the Auto 1.1V. In Prime95 Large FFTs, the system ran for 12 hours without a single error, and the crashes in Ishin completely vanished. I tried pushing it to 1.3V at first, but temps spiked to 65℃, so 1.2V is the sweet spot for stability and heat. Memory temps now stay between 48-54℃ at 4800MHz. I used the motherboard's profile save feature to back up this config so I don't have to do it again. Last updated onApril 9, 2026 11:28 AM.