- Joined
- Feb 24, 2023
- Messages
- 2,834 (4.69/day)
- Location
- Russian Wild West
System Name | DLSS / YOLO-PC |
---|---|
Processor | i5-12400F / 10600KF |
Motherboard | Gigabyte B760M DS3H / Z490 Vision D |
Cooling | Laminar RM1 / Gammaxx 400 |
Memory | 32 GB DDR4-3200 / 16 GB DDR4-3333 |
Video Card(s) | RX 6700 XT / R9 380 2 GB |
Storage | A couple SSDs, m.2 NVMe included / 240 GB CX1 + 1 TB WD HDD |
Display(s) | Compit HA2704 / MSi G2712 |
Case | Matrexx 55 / Junkyard special |
Audio Device(s) | Want loud, use headphones. Want quiet, use satellites. |
Power Supply | Thermaltake 1000 W / Corsair CX650M / DQ550ST [backup] |
Mouse | Don't disturb, cheese eating in progress... |
Keyboard | Makes some noise. Probably onto something. |
VR HMD | I live in real reality and don't need a virtual one. |
Software | Windows 10 and 11 |
I was playing vidya (mostly Postal 2, Worms: Armageddon and other outdated titles) on my "DLSS" machine. The problem is sometimes, I witness brightness and contrast levels go up beyond any reason after closing the game. Happens more often if the game crashed. These crashes have absolutely nothing to do with the GPU illnesses: they happen because of generally poor old DX and OpenGL emulation, or known game bugs. Native DX11/12/Vulkan games run with zero instability. Not a single benchmark had been capable of crashing my GPU.
Latest Win 10, latest drivers, everything had been factory reset. Fresh Windows install didn't do any trick. I don't run anything overclocked.
Do I blame AMD or do I blame M$? Is there a fix for that?
Latest Win 10, latest drivers, everything had been factory reset. Fresh Windows install didn't do any trick. I don't run anything overclocked.
Do I blame AMD or do I blame M$? Is there a fix for that?