F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Only games require no more than 6 gigabytes of memory.

Only games require no more than 6 gigabytes of memory.

Only games require no more than 6 gigabytes of memory.

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GhostyLite
Member
238
03-12-2020, 04:39 PM
#1
I'm experiencing an issue because I recently got a new motherboard and RAM. All the games I play only consume up to 6 GB of RAM. I have 32 GB of 3200 MHz RAM installed on a B560M with an i7-10700 and an RX 6900 XT. It doesn't matter if I'm playing COD, Need for Speed, Battlefield or Cyberpunk 2077—it never exceeds 6 GB. Often the CPU and GPU aren't using all their capacity, so I suspect the RAM might be the problem.
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GhostyLite
03-12-2020, 04:39 PM #1

I'm experiencing an issue because I recently got a new motherboard and RAM. All the games I play only consume up to 6 GB of RAM. I have 32 GB of 3200 MHz RAM installed on a B560M with an i7-10700 and an RX 6900 XT. It doesn't matter if I'm playing COD, Need for Speed, Battlefield or Cyberpunk 2077—it never exceeds 6 GB. Often the CPU and GPU aren't using all their capacity, so I suspect the RAM might be the problem.

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umbelieveable
Junior Member
16
03-13-2020, 11:30 AM
#2
The game consumes as much memory as required, but it doesn’t have to take over your entire RAM. Since the CPU is relatively outdated, there might be a minor bottleneck, though it’s usually not significant.
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umbelieveable
03-13-2020, 11:30 AM #2

The game consumes as much memory as required, but it doesn’t have to take over your entire RAM. Since the CPU is relatively outdated, there might be a minor bottleneck, though it’s usually not significant.

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EuropeanUnion
Senior Member
700
03-14-2020, 03:40 AM
#3
GPU usage is 94%, so there's no reason to worry about being CPU limited. Agreed on the first part though, the game simply doesn't need to use more RAM.
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EuropeanUnion
03-14-2020, 03:40 AM #3

GPU usage is 94%, so there's no reason to worry about being CPU limited. Agreed on the first part though, the game simply doesn't need to use more RAM.

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_Gifirax_PvP_
Member
114
03-14-2020, 11:16 AM
#4
Usually I don’t realize how much power most CPUs think they have.
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_Gifirax_PvP_
03-14-2020, 11:16 AM #4

Usually I don’t realize how much power most CPUs think they have.

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Brudora
Senior Member
726
03-14-2020, 02:13 PM
#5
Cyberpunk performs well on multiple cores, but games depending more on single-core speed may still be restricted by CPU power. It would be wise to check this in the other titles discussed.
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Brudora
03-14-2020, 02:13 PM #5

Cyberpunk performs well on multiple cores, but games depending more on single-core speed may still be restricted by CPU power. It would be wise to check this in the other titles discussed.

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UnDeaD13
Junior Member
45
03-15-2020, 12:07 AM
#6
I get your point, but it should exceed 5 GB or so. When I had just 16 GB on an older motherboard, it required around 8 GB or more for certain games (same CPU and GPU).
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UnDeaD13
03-15-2020, 12:07 AM #6

I get your point, but it should exceed 5 GB or so. When I had just 16 GB on an older motherboard, it required around 8 GB or more for certain games (same CPU and GPU).

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xMayh3m
Member
52
03-22-2020, 08:01 PM
#7
Occasionally in cyberpunk scenes the CPU drops to around 50-60% while the GPU stays steady, resulting in both components operating at a low usage.
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xMayh3m
03-22-2020, 08:01 PM #7

Occasionally in cyberpunk scenes the CPU drops to around 50-60% while the GPU stays steady, resulting in both components operating at a low usage.

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Pekoni
Junior Member
24
03-22-2020, 09:36 PM
#8
Games seldom consume all of your CPU power. If they do, it usually means you're running low on resources. This alone isn't a big problem. When both CPU and GPU hit that level, RAM speed or latency might be the real bottleneck. With 32 GB of RAM, that's unlikely to be the main issue. You might want to verify in Task Manager whether everything is being recognized and check how much is reserved by the system. You can't judge RAM usage across different games; the requirements vary by software. Each program uses whatever it needs.
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Pekoni
03-22-2020, 09:36 PM #8

Games seldom consume all of your CPU power. If they do, it usually means you're running low on resources. This alone isn't a big problem. When both CPU and GPU hit that level, RAM speed or latency might be the real bottleneck. With 32 GB of RAM, that's unlikely to be the main issue. You might want to verify in Task Manager whether everything is being recognized and check how much is reserved by the system. You can't judge RAM usage across different games; the requirements vary by software. Each program uses whatever it needs.

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FTTank2008
Member
174
03-27-2020, 10:47 PM
#9
You might consider adding high definition mods to boost performance, though be mindful that installing them could activate anti-cheat measures—proceed at your own hazard. Another option is to acknowledge that certain games with lower memory demands, like the ones you mentioned, are designed to run efficiently without heavy resource usage.
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FTTank2008
03-27-2020, 10:47 PM #9

You might consider adding high definition mods to boost performance, though be mindful that installing them could activate anti-cheat measures—proceed at your own hazard. Another option is to acknowledge that certain games with lower memory demands, like the ones you mentioned, are designed to run efficiently without heavy resource usage.

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TheGamerJg
Junior Member
17
03-28-2020, 09:00 AM
#10
Technically, games usually require a minimum of 16GB—though you should allocate more. In reality, usage is often much less. Short version: you didn<|pad|> to say anything about performance problems, so everything should work fine. Windows handles resources well, generally.
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TheGamerJg
03-28-2020, 09:00 AM #10

Technically, games usually require a minimum of 16GB—though you should allocate more. In reality, usage is often much less. Short version: you didn<|pad|> to say anything about performance problems, so everything should work fine. Windows handles resources well, generally.

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