Trying to run this new game on an old drive is like taking a horse carriage on a highway; as soon as the effects ramp up, the system just gives me a crash-to-desktop gift. The Intel 760P 1TB controller was hitting 82-88℃ under load, triggering the hardware thermal protection. I tried rigging a small fan to blow directly on it, but it only dropped the temp by 3 degrees—totally useless. I ended up using the driver settings to cap the max transfer speed at 2500MB/s and killed every unnecessary background write service. In OCCT stress tests, the controller settled at 65-72℃, and the drive stopped disappearing from the system. I almost bricked my boot sequence trying to lower the voltage, but a tweak to the power management plan saved it. Drive temps now hover around 55-62℃. It's slower, but I can finally play for two hours without a crash. Exported the crash logs from Event Viewer for peace of mind, with temps holding at 62-68℃. Logs exported. Last updated onApril 1, 2026 9:00 AM.
Trying to run this game on 16GB is like trying to pull a freight trailer with a bicycle; every time a massive ultimate effect hits the screen, the system just gives me a memory overflow crash. My Corsair Vengeance LPX DDR4 3200MHz was struggling with 4K textures, with usage pinned between 14.2-15.8GB. I tried letting Windows manage the page file automatically, but that just tripled my loading times—absolute joke. I ended up manually setting the page file to 24GB and used a cleaner to kill about 800MB of background bloat. In OCCT, my memory error rate dropped from 8% to 0%, and the crashes stopped. At first, the game would just freeze the moment I launched it after adding the virtual memory, but moving the page file to my fastest NVMe SSD partition solved it. Temps are hitting 48-54℃ and my fans are screaming at 1400-1600RPM. It's a messy workaround, but it keeps the game running. Last updated onApril 16, 2026 4:08 PM.
Trying to run this game on DDR3 is like trying to pull a rocket with a tractor. Every time Wukong transforms, the system just hits me with a memory overflow crash. 8GB of Kingston HyperX DDR3 1866 is a joke against 4K textures, with usage constantly pinned between 7.2-7.8GB. I tried enabling standard virtual memory, but the load times tripled, which was honestly hilarious in a depressing way. I ended up manually forcing the page file to 16GB and using a RAM cleaner to claw back 1.2GB of background space. In OCCT, the memory error rate dropped from a shocking 12% to 0%, and the crashes finally stopped. The first time I bumped the virtual memory, the game just froze on launch until I moved the page file to a high-speed SSD partition. The RAM is running hot at 52-58℃ and the fans sound like a jet engine. I've exported all the crash logs from Event Viewer to confirm the stability, with fans screaming at 1400-1600RPM just to keep it alive. Last updated onApril 27, 2026 1:25 PM.
The power delivery on this board is basically naked when facing a 128-player battlefield; as soon as the screen fills with explosions, I get a BSOD. The VRM temps on my Maxsun MS-Challenger B850M-K were hitting 102°C - 108°C, triggering a hard thermal shutdown. I tried stuffing three extra case fans in there to blast the board, but it only dropped the temp by 5 degrees—absolutely ridiculous. I finally gave up and capped the CPU max boost frequency at 4.8GHz in the BIOS and forced the VRM fan curve to 100% full blast. In OCCT, the core temps stabilized at 72°C - 78°C with no more voltage drops. My first attempt at undervolting just caused the game to hang on the loading screen until I tweaked the Vcore offset. Now the fans sound like a jet engine taking off, but at least I can play for two hours without a crash. I've cleared and exported the crash logs from Event Viewer, and the fans are now steady at 1600-1800 RPM. Last updated onApril 6, 2026 10:41 AM.
Running an open world on this drive felt like driving a carriage on a highway; every time the effects peaked, the game just crashed to desktop. The controller on the Kioxia EXCERIA PRO 2TB was hitting 85-91℃ under load, triggering the hardware thermal protection. I tried slapping a small case fan directly on the drive, but it only dropped the temp by 2 degrees—totally useless. I eventually went into the driver settings and capped the maximum transfer speed at 3000MB/s and killed all unnecessary background write services. During an OCCT stress test, the controller stayed between 68-75℃, and the drive stopped disappearing from the system. I actually locked up my PC on the loading screen while trying to lower the voltage, which was a nightmare until I adjusted the power management plan. Now it runs at 58-65℃; it's slightly slower, but I can finally play for three hours straight. I've exported the crash logs via Event Viewer, and fans are steady at 1400-1600RPM. Last updated onMarch 31, 2026 9:11 PM.