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A complete hardware list might help others to assist you.
No mention of ram or psu. This may be relevant.
As a 4+1 phase power delivery, higher power processors will generally need good cooling for the motherboard, including the VRM area. Make sure your cables are bundled and pathed to prevent turbulence and reduced airflow, that you have adequate fans, and dedicating a fan to the VRM area may help. If you have the case tucked under a desk, move it out where it can breathe.
Crash type may be relevant. Crash to desktop? Crash with BSOD? Crash and hard reset and reboot?
Overclocking any components at all? Drop to stock clocks.
Hey, first of all thank you for taking your time to try to solve my issue!
I have 8 Gb of hyperx 1866 mhz ram and 600 w Antec power supply.
Games crash to desktop with some generic "Sorry for inconvenience, your game has crashed" message.
My pc is located right to my desk and although my temps on cpu(water cooled) and gpu are fine, I have only one 120mm fan in case. I had CPU turboclocked but after dropping to stock values it still crashes.
So what should I do? Get more fans for case ?
Ensure your BIOS is updated. One way that is rather dusty, but tests cooling, is to take the side of the case off, and place a large box fan (like a 20 inch box fan) to flood the case with airflow. The CFM (cubic feet a minute) rating is quite high. If you obtain stability, it’s probably a cooling issue, and more fans would help. Often, areas like the chipsets and VRMs require more airflow than some setups give, or in the case of the VRM's, sometimes a fan dedicated to cooling them. Make sure your BIOS is up to date. One way that is rather dusty, but tests cooling, is to take the side of the case off, and place a large box fan (like a 20 inch box fan) to flood the case with airflow. The CFM (cubic feet a minute) rating is quite high.. If you obtain stability, it’s probably a cooling issue, and more fans would help. Often, areas like the chipsets and VRMs require more airflow than some setups give, or in the case of the VRM's, sometimes a fan dedicated to cooling them. One way that is rather dusty, but tests cooling, is to take the side of the case off, and place a large box fan (like a 20 inch box fan) to flood the case with airflow. The CFM (cubic feet a minute) rating is quite high.. If you obtain stability, it’s probably a cooling issue, and more fans would help. Often, areas like the chipsets and VRMs require more airflow than some setups give, or in the case of the VRM's, sometimes a fan dedicated to cooling them.
Here’s a rewritten version of the text, aiming for clarity and conciseness:
“The computer consistently crashes during gameplay. I've updated the BIOS, but the issue persists. To attempt to mitigate airflow, I’ve added two intake fans at the front and an exhaust fan at the rear, along with water cooling fans. Despite these changes, the game crashes remain a problem.”