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

Every time I hit a new area, the loading bar just hangs at 80%. It's that same sluggish feeling from the old single-channel memory days. The bandwidth on the ADATA ValueRAM DDR3 1600 is just completely overwhelmed by modern assets, with latency hovering around 95-110ns. I tried switching to the 'High Performance' power plan in Windows, but the read speeds didn't budge an inch. That's when I realized the timings were the real bottleneck. I went into the BIOS and squeezed the primary timings from 11-11-11-28 down to 9-9-9-24, while pushing the voltage up to 1.65V. In CrystalDiskMark, the memory latency dropped from 105ns to a much snappier 88-92ns. I did have two failed boots while pushing the timings, but loosening the tRCD slightly brought it back to life. RAM temps are stable at 48-55℃ and the VRMs are at 50-58℃. The built-in storage analyzer shows loading times dropped by about 3 seconds, and the game finally feels responsive. Last updated onMarch 30, 2026 10:28 AM.

When you're exploring Teyvat and hit these tiny, random micro-stutters, it really messes with the flow, and it made me realize something was wrong. My V360 LOKI pump was spinning at 2100-2300 RPM, but the CPU temps were still spiking from 55℃ to 82-88℃ in seconds—clearly a heat transfer bottleneck. I tried cranking the fans to max, but the air coming out of the radiator was barely warm, meaning the heat was just trapped at the core. I tore down the radiator and found the fins were completely choked with dust. After a deep clean with compressed air and double-checking the pump power headers, the CPU temps dropped to 62-68℃ under the same load. I actually had a mini-heart attack when I accidentally loosened a fitting and saw a tiny leak, but I tightened the seal and it's all good now. The pump is now steady at 2400 RPM. The temp logger confirms the cooling efficiency is back to 100%, with hardware sitting at 62-68℃. Last updated onMarch 18, 2026 7:11 PM.

When you're exploring Teyvat and hit these tiny, random micro-stutters, it really messes with the flow, and it made me realize something was wrong. My V360 LOKI pump was spinning at 2100-2300 RPM, but the CPU temps were still spiking from 55℃ to 82-88℃ in seconds—clearly a heat transfer bottleneck. I tried cranking the fans to max, but the air coming out of the radiator was barely warm, meaning the heat was just trapped at the core. I tore down the radiator and found the fins were completely choked with dust. After a deep clean with compressed air and double-checking the pump power headers, the CPU temps dropped to 62-68℃ under the same load. I actually had a mini-heart attack when I accidentally loosened a fitting and saw a tiny leak, but I tightened the seal and it's all good now. The pump is now steady at 2400 RPM. The temp logger confirms the cooling efficiency is back to 100%, with hardware sitting at 62-68℃. Last updated onMarch 18, 2026 7:11 PM.

During those massive summon fights, the game would just freeze for half a second—it was driving me crazy. The Kioxia EXCERIA PRO 2TB hits some electrical interference on certain boards in PCIe 4.0 mode, throwing 0x0000007B low-level read errors. I tried lowering the graphics settings to reduce the load, but the I/O wait stutters stayed exactly the same, which was a frustrating waste of visual quality. I went into the BIOS, forced the PCIe link speed to Gen4 instead of Auto, and updated the NVMe drivers. Monitoring with RTSS, the frame time spikes dropped from 15-40ms down to a tight 12-16ms. I had a brief issue with cold boot recognition after locking Gen4, but disabling Fast Boot in the BIOS fixed it. Drive temps are stable at 48-55℃ with speeds around 7000MB/s. Ran it for 10 hours straight with zero hitches; frame times are locked at 12-16ms. Last updated onMarch 27, 2026 3:27 PM.

Loading the galaxy map was a pain; the progress bar would just hang at 90%. It felt like being back in the HDD era. Because the Onda B760ITX-B4 is so cramped, my SSD was idling between 72-85℃, triggering a hardware-level speed limit. I tried switching the power plan to 'Balanced,' but read speeds actually tanked from 3500MB/s to 1200MB/s. I realized then that heat was the only enemy. I slapped on a 3mm pure copper heatsink and disabled PCIe Power Management in the BIOS. CrystalDiskMark showed random 4K reads jump from 42MB/s back up to 65-72MB/s. I almost bent the board while tightening the heatsink screw, but a quick adjustment fixed it. SSD now stays at 55-62℃ and the board is at 48-55℃. Storage performance is finally back to normal. Last updated onMarch 25, 2026 3:03 PM.

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