I was playing Ark Survival Ascended when my system locked up. No response from the mouse or keyboard, screen frozen, sound loop about 1 second long. I let it sit for a minute, thinking maybe it’ll break out of it, and eventually had to force the power off with the power button.

I restarted my system, and now my performance in games is really bad, I’m getting about 20fps where I used to get 80-100, sometimes it gets so bad it goes into the single digits. I get stuttering sound as well and some pretty bad input lag. In Ark, I can see the textures slowly pop in over time, which normally happens in a matter of a second or two.

Looking at CoreCtrl, if I set it to high performance mode, the GPU’s power usage peaks around 150 Watts instead of 300+.

I’m running Nobara on a 7900X3D and an RX 7900XT with 32GB RAM.

Not sure how to go about diagnosing my issue here. I haven’t made any software changes, so I’m a little lost as to why this would happen.

    • theshatterstone54@feddit.uk
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      11 months ago

      Now that you mentioned it, I’ve had VERY similar issues on an old machine which had some cooling issues (it’s a laptop, what did you expect?). So I’d wager you’re right.

  • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    Just that game or all games performing poorly?

    Just that game: verify or reinstall the game.

    Other games too: if it’s a software issue, check Graphics Driver? For potential hardware issues, check if a GPU power cable is loose, reseat it, and make sure you don’t have two pcie power connectors from the same cable connected to both ports.

    • Cris16228@lemmy.today
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      1 year ago

      and make sure you don’t have two pcie power connectors from the same cable connected to both ports.

      Why? Non question and I’m curious. I have 1 cable from PSU to GPU

      • Voytrekk@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The cable is only rated for so much power, which could be too much for double 8 pins. Having two operated cables ensures it can handle the load.

        I personally used a single cable that carried double 8 pin. At some point, I had issues with my system crashing under GPU load. After investigating, I found that the GPU wasn’t getting the power it needed from the PSU. Looking at the cable, it had started to melt the plastic with the connector in the PSU. I replaced the cable and it was fine, but now I only use one cable per 8 pin connector.

      • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Based on ATX standards https://xdevs.com/doc/Standards/ATX/ATX12V_Power_Supply_Design_Guide_Rev1.1.pdf,

        Each 12V circuit from the PSU should deliver around 150W and definitely not more than 240VA (over current protection kick in rating). One cord runs on that single circuit so it can’t deliver more than that much power. I experienced this when I foolishly thought I could reduce cable clutter building my friends’ PC, only to realize the 3080 ran terribly and was drawing about 150W, not unlike OP, except in my case it was clear this was the issue.

  • schizo@forum.uncomfortable.business
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    1 year ago

    Stuttering and texture pop-in makes me immediately wonder if your SSD shit itself.

    Maybe see if there’s anything in the system logs and/or SMART data that indicates that might be a problem?

    • scutiger@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      The SSD seems healthy as far as smartctl is concerned. No errors or warnings anywhere, no spare storage used, it’s only about half full currently.

      I’m not sure what logs I’m looking for otherwise.

  • Azzu@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Don’t forget to update us please in case you figure something out :)

  • DeathsEmbrace@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Benchmark both cpu and gpu. It might be one of them failing. Check temperatures with the benchmark as well. Also test memory. I’m going to assume it’s throttling or your gpu is having issues. CPU would be obvious because it wouldn’t just be gaming that’s messing up. Normally if it’s only under heavy load it’s because of high usage applying a stress somewhere that’s forcing symptoms of throttling etc.

  • themoonisacheese@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    I don’t think this is your specific issue but I’m sharing just in case.

    Once I had a similar problem and the root cause was basically that in the course of unplugging all USB shit just in case, I replugged my VR headset in a different port. That caused the entire system to become very unresponsive and the logs we’re not helping at all. Maybe you left a bad USB plugged in from something? Probably not but it’s free to check.

    You should look in dmesg, it’s always a mess but maybe your issue appears there.

  • moreeni@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Looking at the system journal using journalctl is always a good start. Move to the page, which shows events around the time the described incident happened and try to see if there’s anything worth of your attention, likely highlighted as a warning (yellow) or an error (red).

    • eldavi@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      This is exactly where I would start and ty add to this good advice I would recommend using the -f flag and let it sit in the background.