FPS issues with games after BSOD

Elite_v4

Commendable
Jun 5, 2016
15
0
1,510
Hi ,
Have been recently having Frame drop's in games that I play. If you want too know what they are called it is Overwatch and H1z1: KING OF THE KILL. I recently had a BSOD this is where it all started...my pc was fine before. I figured I'd mention I just bought this processor didn't see any cpu drops/spikes only when launching the game and going back too the main menu playing h1z1. So I played a game opened up MSI AFTERBURNER I don't overclock my stuff my gtx 950 is already super clocked so I don't need to do that. Is it normal for my gpu too be at like 97-99 when I'm playing games?

My gpu gets like 70c. I never had fps issues until I had that bsod. I tried reinstalling windows fresh from the disc and I still had issues at this point. I think this is a hardware issue or something is wrong. I know for a fact that my CPU is not overheating it nevers goes over 60c. I am using the stock cooler but not the stock thermal paste. I'm using arctic silver 5 and I'm getting really frustrated and that is why I came too here for help. I don't have cpu spikes.

Here are my spec's:
i5-4690K Default clock speed
GTX 950 Super Clocked 2GB OF VRAM
8GB DDR3 1333 MHZ (One ram stick is 1600)

Thank you in advanced. I have already tried setting my pc too high performance mode did nothing even tried it in nvidia control panel and I also have my operating system running off of a ssd and i have a HDD

Edited thread body to include grammar, capitalization, proper sentence construction and spacing to improve comprehension.
Moderator
Lutfij
 
Solution
1| When posting a thread of troubleshooting nature, please include your full system;s specs as:
CPU:
Motherboard:
Ram:
SSD/HDD:
GPU:
PSU:
Chassis:
OS:
Peripherals:

2| When was the first time you experienced a BSOD?

3| Have you made sure your motherboard BIOS is up to date?

4| Deducing from your above post it seems like you own a GTX970 by EVGA...was it bough second hand?

5| One stick is 1600MHz, this essentially means you have 2x4GB sticks of ram and one is rated to operate at DDR3-1600MHz? Remove the new stick of ram and see if the issue persists.

Lutfij

Titan
Moderator
1| When posting a thread of troubleshooting nature, please include your full system;s specs as:
CPU:
Motherboard:
Ram:
SSD/HDD:
GPU:
PSU:
Chassis:
OS:
Peripherals:

2| When was the first time you experienced a BSOD?

3| Have you made sure your motherboard BIOS is up to date?

4| Deducing from your above post it seems like you own a GTX970 by EVGA...was it bough second hand?

5| One stick is 1600MHz, this essentially means you have 2x4GB sticks of ram and one is rated to operate at DDR3-1600MHz? Remove the new stick of ram and see if the issue persists.
 
Solution

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