How to fix the physics lag on ADATA ValueRAM 8GB DDR3 1600?
Every time a horde of dinos appeared, the game would hitch violently—it was a low-level scheduling issue that was honestly infuriating. While this ADATA DDR3 is stable, it can't handle modern physics engines; the motherboard's VRM had voltage sags of up to 0.08V during current spikes, causing the CPU to bounce crazily between 3.0GHz and 3.6GHz. I tried locking the minimum processor state to 100% in Windows, but that just pushed the CPU to 95℃ and triggered thermal throttling—a total disaster. I eventually went into the BIOS, set Load-Line Calibration (LLC) to Mode 4, and nudged the core voltage to 1.20V. In Cinebench R23, my multi-core score jumped by 400 points and the frequency curve became a flat line. I actually failed to boot the first time I tried Mode 4, but a small 0.01V offset correction fixed it. CPU temps stayed around 78-84℃. I backed up the profile in BIOS, and now the physics calculations are smooth as silk.