I’m not sure if anyone will read this and I am really new to the pc building world and need help. I am consistently getting stutters throughout my computer even when there is not a game running. I could simply be browsing the internet and my cursor would stutter a bit and even my audio too. I am fairly sure i built my computer fine as well. I have an
MSI rx 6600
i5-10400
16 gb of ddr4
650W evga bronze power supply
ASUS Prime B560M-A mATX mobo
144hz monitor
I have tried so many things like tinkering with the radeon software like disabling freesync and disabling this other option as well nothing works. I have tried using MSI Afterburner and RTSS that didn’t work as well as vsync. I have tried this method revolving around the GameBarPresenceWriter it did not work either. I have an SSD with my windows installed on it as well as my games. My BIOS is completely up to date as well as my radeon driver. I have also downloaded the necessary drivers for my mobo. All my other drivers are up to date as I checked in the device manager. While using RTSS however, i noticed there’s an extremely consistent and when i say consistent like right on the dot consistent skyrocket in frametime. My frametime is perfectly smooth for half a second and it skyrockets for an extremely short amount of time resulting in my stutters it seems. It happens in around half a secondintervals and really interrupts my gameplay and my overall experience using the computer :(. For example i can run valorant with ease averaging around 300 fps but these stutters make it very hard to play. I run on 64 but windows 10 home if that information isuseful as well. Any help would be so appreciated!!
Disable IPv6 and see if the stuttering stops.
Disabled ipv6 still stuttering:(
Have you checked for corrupt system files?
I am facing exactly the same problem. This stuttering exists only in Windows 10.
i7 12700k
RX 6600xt
gigabyte z690 gaming-x
32GB ram
I have followed guides from the AMD forums but nothing seems to solve this issue.
im having the same issue have u found a fix?