F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop VRAM acting up

VRAM acting up

VRAM acting up

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_lula_molusco_
Junior Member
10
07-23-2016, 10:51 PM
#1
Vram has jumped unexpectedly in recent games—from 2 GB to 6 GB in Red Dead Redemption 2 and 8 GB in Resident Evil Village. Your PC feels sluggish lately, especially after two days of strange performance. A full scan came up clean, but RAM usage stays high even when running Opera (which is fine) and CPU spikes only during gameplay. You’re hoping VRAM returns to its original 2 GB. Your setup includes an Athlon 3000g with 16 GB RAM, Corsair LPX, MSI A320M, and a 1TB NVMe drive.
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_lula_molusco_
07-23-2016, 10:51 PM #1

Vram has jumped unexpectedly in recent games—from 2 GB to 6 GB in Red Dead Redemption 2 and 8 GB in Resident Evil Village. Your PC feels sluggish lately, especially after two days of strange performance. A full scan came up clean, but RAM usage stays high even when running Opera (which is fine) and CPU spikes only during gameplay. You’re hoping VRAM returns to its original 2 GB. Your setup includes an Athlon 3000g with 16 GB RAM, Corsair LPX, MSI A320M, and a 1TB NVMe drive.

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Nice7890
Member
63
07-24-2016, 01:29 AM
#2
it seems impossible given your IGpu specs—either 1 or 2GB dedicated storage. This likely points to an issue with the software measuring it. From what I see, it probably shouldn’t exceed 2GB.
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Nice7890
07-24-2016, 01:29 AM #2

it seems impossible given your IGpu specs—either 1 or 2GB dedicated storage. This likely points to an issue with the software measuring it. From what I see, it probably shouldn’t exceed 2GB.

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rebeccawave
Member
53
07-25-2016, 01:00 PM
#3
Sure, you can allocate more space. I remember having 4GB dedicated for my 2200G, which is definitely adjustable in the BIOS. That’s a good point—just because it might not seem like it right now doesn’t mean it won’t slow down over time. I currently use it as external storage, and it’s working fine. It’s safe to say it won’t crash, but it could become sluggish eventually.
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rebeccawave
07-25-2016, 01:00 PM #3

Sure, you can allocate more space. I remember having 4GB dedicated for my 2200G, which is definitely adjustable in the BIOS. That’s a good point—just because it might not seem like it right now doesn’t mean it won’t slow down over time. I currently use it as external storage, and it’s working fine. It’s safe to say it won’t crash, but it could become sluggish eventually.