In report 2026-GL-07, Ryzen Master showed core voltage jumping between 1.25V - 1.32V, which messed up the frame generation curve during combat arts. I tried locking the RAM to 3200MHz, but it was a waste of time. I used OCCT to find the temperature threshold and ran Prime95 stress tests, then went into the BIOS voltage control panel to flatten the curve to 1.28V - 1.31V. After that, clock speeds stayed tight between 3194MHz - 3224MHz and the tearing stopped. I set up an adaptive fan curve to keep temps between 66℃ - 71℃. MSI Afterburner logs confirm it's stable, and I've backed up the profile for quick recovery. The frame rate is now incredibly steady, making Boss fights feel way more fluid. Last updated onApril 28, 2026 9:55 PM.
Based on Report 07 on Win11 24H2, Ryzen Master showed core voltage jumping between 1.26V - 1.33V, peaking at 1.38V. I tried locking the RAM at 3200MHz, but the frame pool barely improved—I realized locking frequency wouldn't fix unstable power. I used OCCT to lock the temperature threshold and ran Prime95 to fine-tune the voltage curve to 1.29V - 1.32V. In the next match, frequencies settled at 3196MHz - 3226MHz and the tearing vanished. MSI Afterburner confirmed the overclock is stable with temps at 67℃ - 72℃. However, with the high voltage offset, the VRM temps climbed significantly and the fan noise became a total distraction in a quiet room. Last updated onApril 25, 2026 10:19 PM.
Overclocking Report 07 on Windows 11 showed Ryzen Master monitoring core voltage jittering between 1.28V - 1.35V, which made the frame generation curve look like a saw blade. I tried locking the RAM at 3200MHz, but that did nothing. I ran stability tests in OCCT and went into the BIOS voltage control panel to micro-adjust the core voltage offset to the 1.31V - 1.34V range, then hammered it with Prime95. After that, the frequency stayed stable between 3198MHz - 3228MHz, and the tearing finally stopped. Even so, in Max Performance mode, the package temp hits 74℃ and the fans sound like a jet engine. This board's VRMs are at their physical limit; there's no more room to squeeze. Last updated onApril 22, 2026 9:33 PM.
Referring to the 2026-04G report on Windows 11 24H2, AMD Ryzen Master showed the controller temp swinging between 51 - 66℃, with core power fluctuating between 1.30 - 1.37V, peaking at 1.41V. I tried locking the frequency at 3200MHz, but the frame pool barely improved. I then used OCCT stability tests to lock the temperature threshold and applied pressure with Prime95, tuning the voltage curve to a steady 1.32 - 1.35V range. Back in the hunt, Ryzen Master recorded frequency fluctuations tightening to 3195 - 3225MHz, and the screen tearing vanished. MSI Afterburner verified the overclock stability, but because of the physical limits of the laptop's cooling module, temps still climb back to 68 - 73℃ after long sessions. Constant low temps are just not happening here. Last updated onApril 18, 2026 8:45 PM.
In experiment report JTP9000, I hit a brutal crash loop. I tried forcing the frequency to 3200MHz, but Ryzen Master showed core voltage swinging between 1.32V - 1.39V and temps jumping 53℃ - 68℃, leading to heavy jitters and BSODs. I realized I was pushing the wrong way, so I used the OCCT stability interface to lock the temp threshold and used Prime95 to refine the voltage curve to 1.34V - 1.37V. After that, the frequency held steady at 3200MHz - 3230MHz, and the tearing vanished with temps at 70℃ - 75℃. MSI Afterburner logs confirm the OC is stable, but I've hit a physical thermal wall; any further frequency bumps cause temps to spike instantly. Last updated onMarch 24, 2026 7:17 PM.