F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Stuttering Issues

Stuttering Issues

Stuttering Issues

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Epic_75
Junior Member
4
08-04-2025, 08:29 AM
#1
I’ve been having trouble with stuttering a lot lately, especially in Warzone. I know lots of other people are experiencing the same thing right now, but honestly, it doesn’t seem *that* bad. I'm okay with playing at a lower frame rate as long as my game doesn’t suddenly drop frames during intense battles – that's when I always die.

I’m running a GTX 1060 with 3GB of VRAM, an AMD Ryzen 7 2700 processor, and 16GB of Vengeance LPX DDR4 RAM – two sticks of 8GB each. I just feel like something’s not quite right, and I can't figure out what’s causing it. (And yeah, I know my graphics card is a bit outdated these days; I have a 1060 with 6GB, but would upgrading to that one make a difference?)
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Epic_75
08-04-2025, 08:29 AM #1

I’ve been having trouble with stuttering a lot lately, especially in Warzone. I know lots of other people are experiencing the same thing right now, but honestly, it doesn’t seem *that* bad. I'm okay with playing at a lower frame rate as long as my game doesn’t suddenly drop frames during intense battles – that's when I always die.

I’m running a GTX 1060 with 3GB of VRAM, an AMD Ryzen 7 2700 processor, and 16GB of Vengeance LPX DDR4 RAM – two sticks of 8GB each. I just feel like something’s not quite right, and I can't figure out what’s causing it. (And yeah, I know my graphics card is a bit outdated these days; I have a 1060 with 6GB, but would upgrading to that one make a difference?)

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Tera_Byte
Member
57
08-04-2025, 08:29 AM
#2
Are you hitting the right speeds for your system? Double-check that your CPU, GPU, and memory are all running at their intended speeds. A 6GB 1060 is roughly 10% quicker than a 3GB model. If you’re only seeing around 20 frames per second with the 3GB card, you can expect to see about 22 FPS with the 6GB version. It’s an improvement, but don't expect it to suddenly double your frame rates.
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Tera_Byte
08-04-2025, 08:29 AM #2

Are you hitting the right speeds for your system? Double-check that your CPU, GPU, and memory are all running at their intended speeds. A 6GB 1060 is roughly 10% quicker than a 3GB model. If you’re only seeing around 20 frames per second with the 3GB card, you can expect to see about 22 FPS with the 6GB version. It’s an improvement, but don't expect it to suddenly double your frame rates.

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CodeBreaker18
Junior Member
36
08-04-2025, 08:29 AM
#3
Are you hitting the right speeds for your system? Double-check that your CPU, GPU, and memory are all running at their intended speeds. A 6GB 1060 is roughly 10% quicker than a 3GB model. If you’re only seeing around 20 frames per second with the 3GB card, you can expect to see about 22 FPS with the 6GB version. It’s an improvement, but don't expect it to suddenly double your frame rates.
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CodeBreaker18
08-04-2025, 08:29 AM #3

Are you hitting the right speeds for your system? Double-check that your CPU, GPU, and memory are all running at their intended speeds. A 6GB 1060 is roughly 10% quicker than a 3GB model. If you’re only seeing around 20 frames per second with the 3GB card, you can expect to see about 22 FPS with the 6GB version. It’s an improvement, but don't expect it to suddenly double your frame rates.

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Gfiti
Member
103
08-04-2025, 08:29 AM
#4
Hey, I’m a little stumped about getting my audio frequencies just right. Also, I've started noticing a slow red flash on my motherboard – it’s an Asrock Fatal1ty X370 Gaming X, and I honestly have no clue what’s causing it. I'm completely lost and not sure where to even begin.
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Gfiti
08-04-2025, 08:29 AM #4

Hey, I’m a little stumped about getting my audio frequencies just right. Also, I've started noticing a slow red flash on my motherboard – it’s an Asrock Fatal1ty X370 Gaming X, and I honestly have no clue what’s causing it. I'm completely lost and not sure where to even begin.

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Gravewalker21
Member
64
08-04-2025, 08:29 AM
#5
This is probably a start.
https://www.cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html
I'm sure there are other programs out there. Read the motherboard manual to see what lights it has.
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Gravewalker21
08-04-2025, 08:29 AM #5

This is probably a start.
https://www.cpuid.com/softwares/hwmonitor.html
I'm sure there are other programs out there. Read the motherboard manual to see what lights it has.

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4um_For_Rose
Member
86
08-04-2025, 08:29 AM
#6
If you're not super familiar with HWMonitor, how would you usually tell if a current frequency is where it’s supposed to be?
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4um_For_Rose
08-04-2025, 08:29 AM #6

If you're not super familiar with HWMonitor, how would you usually tell if a current frequency is where it’s supposed to be?

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BrainLetsPlay
Member
68
08-04-2025, 08:30 AM
#7
I often check to see if my computer’s specs—like how much RAM it has or what kind of graphics card it uses—match up with the information listed online or in the product manuals.
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BrainLetsPlay
08-04-2025, 08:30 AM #7

I often check to see if my computer’s specs—like how much RAM it has or what kind of graphics card it uses—match up with the information listed online or in the product manuals.