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The moment I hit the city gates, the screen just freezes for three seconds—it's a total immersion killer. Even with 16GB of VRAM, the data path from the SSD to the GPU was hitting a 120-150ms bottleneck when loading massive NPC models. I tried moving the game to a RAM disk, but that was a huge mistake; I ran out of memory instantly and got a BSOD. Talk about a fail. I eventually went into Device Manager, set the NVMe controller power management to 'Maximum Performance,' and reorganized my Windows page file. In CrystalDiskMark, random reads improved from 55MB/s to 72MB/s, and the city stuttering dropped by about 70%. I did run into some file corruption errors after the first cache tweak, which turned out to be my real-time antivirus scanning every tiny file—turning that off fixed it. GPU temps are now 58-64℃, VRAM is 70-76℃, and fans are steady at 1400-1600RPM. Last updated onMarch 11, 2026 9:51 PM.

The optimization in this game is a joke. Once Ray Tracing is on, my CPU becomes a space heater, and the PCcooler RT500 TC ARGB just screams without bringing temps below 90C. It felt like my hardware was being tortured, with clocks jumping erratically between 4.8GHz and 3.2GHz. I even tried popping the side panel off, which only dropped temps by 3C while letting in a ton of dust and making it sound like a lawnmower. I finally went into the BIOS and set a 'steep' fan curve—basically, as soon as it hits 70C, the fans blast at 100%. I also capped the single-core boost to 4.5GHz. In OCCT, the max temp finally stayed within 82-87C, and the FPS stabilized from a 30-60 range to a consistent 45-52. I noticed some annoying fan surging around 60C at first, but adding a 3-second smoothing delay fixed that. CPU package power is now steady at 115-128W, with fans locked at 1400-1600 RPM. It's still loud, but at least it doesn't throttle. Last updated onMarch 18, 2026 11:34 AM.

Running a 4TB drive with less than 15% free space is a recipe for disaster. Because the TiPro9000 lacked enough OP (Over-Provisioning) space, the garbage collection kept kicking in, tanking my reads from 7000MB/s to 1200MB/s. I tried using a compression tool on the game files, which was a total fail—it spiked my CPU to 90% and made the game even laggier. I eventually nuked all my unused apps to get free space above 30% and used a partition tool to leave 100GB as unallocated space. Sequential reads bounced back to 6500-7000MB/s, and the scene transitions feel way lighter. The only downside was that some of my backup software started throwing errors because the total disk size changed, but I just updated the paths. Now it runs at 42-52℃ with read latency at 52-68ns. I've exported the logs and confirmed the latency is stable at 52-68ns. Last updated onMarch 5, 2026 7:00 PM.

Trying to run the Remake engine on this frequency felt like a stress test for my patience—every time I loaded a map, it was a stutter-fest. The 6400MHz kit was hitting 95% utilization during heavy shadow rendering, leaving the system stuck in I/O wait for 0.6 to 1.2 seconds. I tried closing every single background app, but aside from not being able to use Discord, the crash rate didn't budge, which was honestly pathetic. I eventually went into the NVIDIA Control Panel, forced the shader cache size to 10GB, and locked my virtual memory to a fixed 32GB range. RivaTuner showed frame times converging from a chaotic 22-110ms to a manageable 16-30ms. I did experience some slow boot times after locking the page file, which I fixed by moving the file to my fastest NVMe partition. Temps are 55-61℃ for RAM and 60-66℃ for the VRMs. I exported the latency logs to verify, and the cache scheduling is finally dialed in. Last updated onFebruary 26, 2026 2:50 PM.

The white aesthetic of this cooler is great, but its performance in raids is a joke. Temps were swinging wildly between 70℃ and 95℃, and my frame rate was bouncing right along with them. The default curve on the Jonsbo CR-1400 ARGB is way too lazy below 80℃, causing the clock speeds to jitter between 3.2GHz and 4.5GHz, which pushed frame times up to 40ms. I tried popping the side panel off my case; it dropped the temp by 3℃ but turned my PC into a dust magnet and sounded like a lawnmower—totally ridiculous. I eventually went into the BIOS and set a steep fan curve: as soon as it hits 75℃, the fans ramp up to 100%, and I optimized the front intake. In RTSS, the frame time jitter dropped from 15-45ms to a smooth 12-18ms. I did notice the fans 'hunting' or surging around 60℃ at first, but adding a 2-second step-up delay smoothed it out. CPU package power now stays at 105-120W, and the fans are steady at 1400-1600 RPM. Last updated onMarch 11, 2026 10:52 AM.

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