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

When building large bases, I noticed my CPU core clocks suddenly diving from 3.8GHz to 2.4GHz, which made fast camera turns feel incredibly choppy. The VRM on the Galax H310M Warrior just can't handle modern game loads, with temps hitting 92-98℃ and triggering a forced downclock. I first tried limiting the CPU power limit to 45W via software; while temps dropped to 75℃, the game loading times became painfully slow, which just ruined the experience. I ended up strapping an 80mm fan directly onto the VRM heatsinks and locked the RAM frequency at 2666MHz to take some pressure off the memory controller. HWInfo shows VRM temps are now stable at 78-84℃, and the clock jumping has stopped. I had a moment of panic when the fan didn't spin on the first boot due to a loose connector, but it's fine now. CPU temps are around 62-70℃. A 3-hour stress test confirms no more throttling. Last updated onApril 9, 2026 9:08 AM.

Walking through the streets of Kamurocho, I'd get these tiny, annoying micro-stutters. They weren't constant, but they absolutely killed the immersion. Monitoring showed the Gainward RTX 2060 was hitting 83℃, triggering a hardware-level thermal throttle that tanked the clock from 1710MHz down to 1300MHz. I first tried lowering the Ambient Occlusion settings, which gave me 5 more FPS but didn't stop the overheating—a timid approach that got me nowhere. I eventually went into the control panel and set a steep fan curve to hit 85% speed as soon as the card touched 70℃, while dropping the power limit to 90% to reduce heat output. RivaTuner showed frametimes tighten from 15-30ms to 12-16ms. The fans were way too loud at idle at first, so I had to set a zero-RPM mode for anything under 40℃. Core temps now hover around 74-78℃. 3DMark confirmed no more drops, and the card is finally behaving. Last updated onApril 7, 2026 9:48 AM.

Whenever a massive boss unleashed a screen-filling attack, I'd get these micro-stutters that were lethal for precision parrying. Monitoring showed that while my Corsair Vengeance 32GB was at 6400MHz, the secondary timings were fluctuating by 10-15ns under peak load, causing frametimes to jump between 12-28ms. I tried the High Performance power plan in Windows, but that didn't touch the underlying sync issues. I went into the BIOS, re-loaded the XMP 3.0 profile, and nudged the DRAM voltage from 1.35V to 1.38V. The RTSS frametime curve smoothed out to a tight 8-13ms, and the combat feels way more responsive. I had a couple of boot delays after the change, but a motherboard BIOS update cleared that up. Temps are steady at 54-60℃. 3DMark stress tests confirm the fix. Last updated onApril 9, 2026 4:32 PM.

During heavy physics calculations, I noticed my CPU core clock suddenly plummet from 5.0GHz to 3.2GHz, which felt like a massive slide-show whenever I turned the camera quickly. The VRMs on the ASUS B760M TUF were hitting 95-102℃ during transient power peaks, triggering the motherboard's thermal protection. I first tried capping the CPU power limit to 125W in the BIOS; temps dropped to 80℃, but the rendering speed took a hit, which just ruined the experience. I eventually rigged a small 12cm fan to blow directly onto the VRM heatsinks and set the VRM fan curve to full speed. HWInfo showed the power delivery temps stabilizing between 78-84℃, and the clock speeds stopped diving. I had a minor scare where the RAM wasn't detected on the first boot because of the new fan cables, but a quick cable tidy fixed it. CPU temps are now 65-72℃. After a 3-hour stress test, the clocks are stable and VRM temps are locked at 78-84℃. Last updated onMarch 18, 2026 4:48 PM.

Amidst the neon lights of Night City, I kept getting these incredibly brief pauses. They weren't constant, but they totally ruined the immersion. My logs showed that in Overdrive mode, the CPU power would spike to 150W, and the small fin stack of the Jonsbo CR-1400E just couldn't keep up, leaving temps fluctuating between 88-94℃ and causing frametimes to jump by 10-20ms. I tried lowering the resolution, which boosted the average FPS but didn't stop the thermal stutters—a cautious approach that got me nowhere. I went into the BIOS and set a positive 0.1V fan voltage offset to force a higher base RPM at low loads and added a front intake fan to the case to fix the airflow. RivaTuner showed the frametime gaps shrink from 15-30ms down to a tight 12-16ms. The first time I bumped the voltage, the fan had a slight resonance hum at idle, but setting a minimum floor of 800 RPM killed it. Temps are now 78-84℃ and memory is holding at 58-63℃. Last updated onApril 23, 2026 8:15 PM.

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