Question Does ANYONE know how I would replicate these AMD Ryzen Master Settings INTO my BIOS?

Mar 16, 2024
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I have a AMD Ryzen 9 5900X 12-core, 24-Thread Unlocked Desktop Processor, would like to keep the gaming mode set up I had with the AMD Ryzen Master program. I like to play wow and that game is heavily benefited by having just my main 6 cores having all the power. And I like the fact I could boost my speeds from 4.2 to 4.4. I am not sure how I would replicate that in BIOS however (ECPECIALLY the part of deactivating 6 cores and keeping only 6 other ones active for my game)

In AMD Ryzen Master it sort of just did it. I tried googling for over half an hour and it appears some motherboards have a core option but I cannot see that option anywhere. Below I will give a picture of the gaming profile that I liked for my game.
iz7N3OF.png

As you can see it only activated 6 of my cores and i set them all to 4400. I ran at 4200 at fine 40 c temps so i figure a little push is fine.

This is what my motherboard BIOS settings look like but i don't see an option ANYWHERE to disable cores or to change GHZ. Help would be much appreciated.
PXL-20240316-200532292.jpg

nWJO0Kk.jpg

jjRZf9t.jpg

28ktfFL.jpg

28ktfFL.jpg

PXL-20240316-200735511.jpg

yOXOCNQ.jpg

LzLXAAa.jpg

y5NSHV0.jpg


Sorry for all the pictures, really wish bios made it simple and just had an option of ENTER GHZ INCREASE and DISABLE CORES. I have no idea what I would change to get the values above for my first image from the AMD Ryzen master program. Thank you for your time.
 
I have a AMD Ryzen 9 5900X 12-core, 24-Thread Unlocked Desktop Processor, would like to keep the gaming mode set up I had with the AMD Ryzen Master program. I like to play wow and that game is heavily benefited by having just my main 6 cores having all the power. And I like the fact I could boost my speeds from 4.2 to 4.4. I am not sure how I would replicate that in BIOS however (ECPECIALLY the part of deactivating 6 cores and keeping only 6 other ones active for my game)

In AMD Ryzen Master it sort of just did it. I tried googling for over half an hour and it appears some motherboards have a core option but I cannot see that option anywhere. Below I will give a picture of the gaming profile that I liked for my game.
iz7N3OF.png

As you can see it only activated 6 of my cores and i set them all to 4400. I ran at 4200 at fine 40 c temps so i figure a little push is fine.

This is what my motherboard BIOS settings look like but i don't see an option ANYWHERE to disable cores or to change GHZ. Help would be much appreciated.
PXL-20240316-200532292.jpg

nWJO0Kk.jpg

jjRZf9t.jpg

28ktfFL.jpg

28ktfFL.jpg

PXL-20240316-200735511.jpg

yOXOCNQ.jpg

LzLXAAa.jpg

y5NSHV0.jpg


Sorry for all the pictures, really wish bios made it simple and just had an option of ENTER GHZ INCREASE and DISABLE CORES. I have no idea what I would change to get the values above for my first image from the AMD Ryzen master program. Thank you for your time.

I doubt that cutting off half the cores would help gaming at all, most of times it hurts performance.
What's wrong with using RM ? Doesn't even have to be running and it's easier to switch when you want all cores to run.
Another easy option is to set number of cores in Windows.
Run msconfig.exe > BOOT> Advanced options > set "Number of processors" to six. That too you can switch without going to BIOS, just clear the box.
As for setting in BIOS, Asus calls it "Core leveling mode" and could be found in Advanced menu > CPU configuration.
EDIT.
Check Youtube for debate about core reduction. It may have been somewhat useful in the past but new generation of CPUs and Windows can efficiently switch load between cores which keeps them cooler so they can reach higher boost frequency.
 
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For newer AMD systems, there is usually a section in BIOS that you can get to (probably 4+ deep in sub menus) that seems to be a duplicate of the same settings found elsewhere. This is the section that Ryzen Master talks to.
Just be careful, the notes in BIOS on what each setting does is usually woefully inadequate. The settings can also be on different scales than what you would find in Ryzen Master. Eg. CPU PPT setting is in mW in my BIOS, so to limit a CPU to 150W I have to enter a setting of 150000.