This is a bit of a mea culpa from me.

In 2022 I started the build of my dream PC. i9 13900k, 2 TB M.2 drive, 32 GB of 5200 DDR5 ram.

…and a 6600XT.

Now at the time it was all I could afford. I just wanted something that would run most games decently. nothing earth shattering but could do the heavy lifting i needed it to. I planned to upgrade later down the road.

For most games it was (and still is) perfectly fine. It ran most of my 100+ game library with no complaints from me.

But there was one game. Arma 3.

Now anyone who knows Arma 3 will readily admit it is a horribly optimized mess. This games drinks ram and chews up GPU’s like they’re candy.

And my 6600XT was crushed underneath it’s massive weight.

Now the problem for me is at the time I was fanatical about the game. It was pretty much the only game I played constantly. I still play it to this day, just not as much.

I would get stutters, massive frame drops and tons of crashes all centered around not enough GPU ram. (the 6600Xt only has 8) I HATED this card and would loudly complain on every forum every time someone would mention it. I sneered at AMD and desperately wanted to go Nvidia.

problem was i still couldn’t afford to upgrade.

But I finally had it last month and so I saved up and bought…

An Intel ARC A770.

But it worked. frame rates went up, crashes pretty much disappeared and and all was good in the world.

At this point I know you (probably) are screaming "Well what the fuck does this has to do with BIOS!?

well let me explain. You see I also wanted a much better m.2 drive so I bought a WD Black SN850X.

but while I was installing the NVME drive I noticed that my PCIe slot was set to gen3 X8. Not gen4 X16.

This solved everything. I went back to my 6600XT as I was having driver issues with the ARC card. and now when I play Arma 3 it runs much smoother. It still crashes because honestly the game needs a minimum of 16 GB of memory on a video card to run (sort of) fairly smoothly, but frames went up, stutters pretty much disappeared and the 1% lows were much more less noticeable.

All because I missed a BIOS setting.

So WHY? why is BIOS still so troublesome? why can’t it detect cards and automatically set the proper settings by itself?

WHY!?

Anyways, that’s all I have to say about that.

  • Mereo@lemmy.ca
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    58
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    8 months ago

    Trust me, pc buidling in 2024 is a piece of cake compared to the 90s, early 2000s…

    • bfg9k@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      40
      ·
      8 months ago

      Yeah at least we don’t have to mess with manually setting IRQs or making sure the IDE master/slave jumpers are properly set anymore

      Luxury

    • deranger@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      16
      ·
      edit-2
      8 months ago

      Overclocking via jumpers was intense. That first boot could let out the magic smoke if you had the orientation of the half dozen jumpers flipped.

      K6-2 300MHz to 400MHz was my first PC build. 64MB of RAM and a Voodoo2 8MB. I was 12 years old, a stack of Boot PC magazines was my build guide.

      The reason I built that PC? I fucked up a BIOS flash on my IBM Aptiva and the local guys couldn’t figure it out. Shitty BIOS led me to a lifetime of building PCs.

    • Alpha71@lemmy.worldOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      7
      ·
      8 months ago

      I know. I was there too.😂

      I fully admit BIOS has gotten MUCH better, but it still has a ways to go in my opinion.