Strange performance drop after a week after windows install.
Strange performance drop after a week after windows install.
Here’s a rewritten version of the text:
“The user described a perplexing situation with their gaming PC. Initially, they were able to run games like Rainbow Six Siege and GTA V smoothly at 50-60 frames per second. However, after a week, performance drastically declined. Specifically, Rainbow Six Siege dropped to only 30fps, while GTA V became so stuttering that it was unplayable. The user insisted there were no background processes consuming resources. Their hardware configuration includes an NVIDIA GTX 950 graphics card, an older AMD APU, and 12GB of RAM. Despite this seemingly powerful setup, the PC’s performance has deteriorated significantly.”
Here’s the rewritten text, aiming for clarity and conciseness:
“This issue likely stems from a recent software update or a potential virus infection. To resolve it, try running a full scan with antivirus software, or using System Restore to revert your computer's settings to a previous time when it was functioning correctly.”
What has changed during that week?
Perhaps a virus, malware, or
likely some sort of a software update.
See if you can't use system restore to reset back to when all was well.
Here’s a rewritten version of the text, aiming for clarity and conciseness:
The user’s computer is experiencing issues, likely due to a software update or background processes. He’s hesitant to reinstall games from Steam because of potential hard drive damage and avoids cracked versions. It's possible several launchers are running simultaneously, creating confusion.
Potential updates could include operating system patches or driver updates – but these shouldn’t affect other computers using the same launcher or game version. The problem might simply be related to conflicting software running in the background.
The system is experiencing issues, likely due to a software update or perhaps a virus. To resolve this, we can try using System Restore to revert the computer back to a previous state where everything was working correctly. A specific instance involved limiting the processor to one core, which seemed to fix the problem. Using msconfig has also been effective in limiting the a10-5800k to 1 core. While unlikely, it's possible that a software update caused this issue.