Frame Drops on AMD Octa core and MSI 750Ti Twin frozr.

QARTS

Honorable
Nov 20, 2014
302
0
10,860
Hello everyone,
Config-
AMD FX 8120 @3.1 Stock
MSI 970A G46 Mobo
Hyperx Fury 8GB 1866Mhz
CM Hyper212X Air cooler
MSI Gtx 750Ti Twin Frozr.

While playing Ryse Son of Rome,FC 4and Mafia III am experiencing sudden framedrops.
Tried Lowering the resolution and Custom graphics to LOW still in vain.
I've updated the drivers too.
PS-In HWinfo,GPU section is Blank(Dont know why)
Mostly i play at 1680*1050 and at Medium graphics.
Also BF4 and GTA V run fine.
Any solutions?
 
Solution

You need to use AMD Overdrive to monitor FX chips. Some other monitoring software doesn't interpret the readings properly - which must be the case because your system would hard power off long before even approaching 206 (assuming degrees C).
Is this a new problem? As-in, did these games used to work fine and now they don't? Or has it always been like this?

You want to look at CPU & GPU load and temps while you're gaming and pay careful attention to what happens when your frame rates drop.
- Use AMD Overdrive to monitor CPU temps
- Use Task Manager to monitor CPU usage
- Use MSI afterburner or GPU-Z to monitor GPU temps and usage.

After a while of play (at least 5 minutes), are both CPU & GPU temps still okay?
Keep playing with those utilities open in the background and then look carefully for what happens when the frame rates drop. Are your temps still okay (i.e., is anything having to throttle because of high temps)? Does the usage on GPU drop suddenly (that would indicate either a CPU bottleneck, or some other part of your system preventing the GPU from staying busy).
 

QARTS

Honorable
Nov 20, 2014
302
0
10,860
Well yeahh,i monitor my TEmps n CPU usage by MSI Afterburner.
The GPU temps are under 75degrees.
Also i forgot to mention-My CPU temp after playing for about 15-20Min rises to about 206degrees!!! WTH(during Assassins creed Syndicate and Ryse son of rome)
What m i supposed to do now?
 

You need to use AMD Overdrive to monitor FX chips. Some other monitoring software doesn't interpret the readings properly - which must be the case because your system would hard power off long before even approaching 206 (assuming degrees C).
 
Solution