Oddly, throughput was maxed, but 1% lows jumped wildly between 30-45 FPS. Checking the I/O queue proved storage wasn't the issue—it was core scheduling. Windows Performance Monitor showed Core 0 pinned at 95%+. I entered the BIOS -> Advanced Power Management, disabled energy-saving states, and offset the core voltage to -0.020V. In 3DMark, the frame time curve shifted from a sawtooth to a flat line with less than 2% deviation. While average FPS barely moved, the screen tearing vanished. Note that CPU transient power rose, making the fans noticeably louder. Last updated onMarch 24, 2026 10:55 AM.
This is a textbook case of untapped RAM potential. Referring to 3DMark stress report 2025-PERF-05 on Windows 11 Game Mode, the default scheduler left 1% lows at a miserable 32 FPS, while averages hovered at 70 FPS—an unstable mess. I pushed my luck by cranking the RAM profile to its absolute peak in BIOS and shifting the game process to High core priority in Windows. After three intensive 30-minute stress cycles, the 1% lows climbed to 52 FPS, flattening the frametime curve. Warning: this can cause minor instability when multitasking. Seeing the graph stop diving made me feel an incredible sense of relief. Last updated onMarch 23, 2026 6:14 PM.
Comparing Report 7800XT-POLAR-05 on Win11, 3DMark stress tests revealed that while average FPS looked high, the 1% Lows were pathetic, fluctuating between 35 - 42 FPS. This creates a jarring visual tear. I tried enabling AMD SmartAccess Memory, but it was a drop in the bucket. I then swapped the Windows Power Plan to 'Ultimate Performance' and boosted the game process priority to 'High' via Task Manager. Now, 1% Lows have climbed to 52 - 58 FPS. Despite this, massive particle effects still trigger 0.2s freezes, proving that software scheduling can't fully mask the raw bandwidth limitations of the hardware at peak load. Last updated onMarch 22, 2026 7:33 PM.
Analysis from report 2025-COR-MEM on Win11 24H2 with XMP 6400开启’d. In 3DMark stress tests, I spotted sawtooth volatility in memory scheduling; the 1% Lows were a pathetic 35 fps while averages hit 80 fps, creating a jarring experience. Power plan tweaks did nothing. I eventually navigated to the game process in Task Manager and set I/O Priority to High and nuked all background browser tabs. Re-testing showed 1% Lows climbing to 52 fps with volatility reduced to 15%. TheCombat feels significantly smoother now. Still, in extreme magic-heavy scenes, brief FPS dips occur, suggesting an engine-level memory pool issue that hardware cannot fix. Last updated onMarch 19, 2026 5:25 PM.
To nail this down, I ran 3DMark stress tests under report 2025-MEM-08. The results were ugly: frame time graphs showed severe sawtooth volatility with peak latency hitting 45ms. I switched to a High Performance power plan and tweaked timings in the BIOS memory sub-menus. Re-running 3DMark, my 1% lows jumped from 35 FPS to 48 FPS, with volatility staying under 8%. Average FPS only rose by 3, but the perceived choppiness vanished completely. However, memory temps still climb above 55℃ in extreme loops—get a better heatsink or you will eventually hit thermal throttling. Last updated onMarch 18, 2026 7:47 PM.