Question GPUs don't want to run at 100%, and other performance problems ?

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you’re literally not answering the questions
I didn't really get what you was trying to say, but english also isn't my first language. But no I don't think so that it has anything to do with settings, I have changed about every setting there is regarding to this problem. In settings, Control panel, Msi afterburner, AMD software, Bios, Games.
 
I have RDR2 although I never really played much about an hour it seemed to run fine on my system. I just ran the built in benchmark which averaged 71fps @1440p. Looks like it is GPU bound on my 3070
I get more somewhere around 40-50fps@1080p. That couldn't really be normal. And both components are not even running near full load.
 
It depends on the graphical settings of course. There are a ton of them for RDR2 I bet if you turned everything up to max it would run like a slideshow on your 4060.
No it's not that bad, and that's the thing. If I change it from dookie graphics all the way up to max, is almost about the same fps. The power delivery in my system just doesn't seem to be working correctly.
 
I get more somewhere around 40-50fps@1080p. That couldn't really be normal. And both components are not even running near full load.
Your CPU will never run at full load while gaming (even if you are CPU bottleneck) for the simple reason that games are not optimized to use all the cores. It's why modern CPUs are rarely running at more than 30-50% in games (depending on the number of cores).

You could get PresentMon from the Intel website (it's a free monitoring software that can be used with any GPU and CPU) and ask it to display the CPU and GPU busy time. If the CPU value is constantly and significantly higher than the GPU (while gaming) you are CPU bottleneck.


Also, I sincerely hope you are not installing your games on your HDD drive.
 
Your CPU will never run at full load while gaming (even if you are CPU bottleneck) for the simple reason that games are not optimized to use all the cores. It's why modern CPUs are rarely running at more than 30-50% in games (depending on the number of cores).

You could get PresentMon from the Intel website (it's a free monitoring software that can be used with any GPU and CPU) and ask it to display the CPU and GPU busy time. If the CPU value is constantly and significantly higher than the GPU (while gaming) you are CPU bottleneck.


Also, I sincerely hope you are not installing your games on your HDD drive.
I will try that. And no I am not using my HDD for games, only for backup and files.
 
No it's not that bad, and that's the thing. If I change it from dookie graphics all the way up to max, is almost about the same fps. The power delivery in my system just doesn't seem to be working correctly.
A faulty power delivery would not just make your games running at a lower frame rate, you would most likely get other issues like artefacts, crashes, black screens, etc. If everything runs fine but just at lower fps, it's because something is slowing your PC down, and like everyone else says, it really looks like it's your CPU. You also said you moved your card to the lower PCIe slot to test for the coil whine. I hope you moved it back to the top one otherwise you only get half the bandwidth for your GPU.
 
A faulty power delivery would not just make your games running at a lower frame rate, you would most likely get other issues like artefacts, crashes, black screens, etc. If everything runs fine but just at lower fps, it's because something is slowing your PC down, and like everyone else says, it really looks like it's your CPU. You also said you moved your card to the lower PCIe slot to test for the coil whine. I hope you moved it back to the top one otherwise you only get half the bandwidth for your GPU.
Yes I placed it back.
 
Your CPU will never run at full load while gaming (even if you are CPU bottleneck) for the simple reason that games are not optimized to use all the cores. It's why modern CPUs are rarely running at more than 30-50% in games (depending on the number of cores).

You could get PresentMon from the Intel website (it's a free monitoring software that can be used with any GPU and CPU) and ask it to display the CPU and GPU busy time. If the CPU value is constantly and significantly higher than the GPU (while gaming) you are CPU bottleneck.


Also, I sincerely hope you are not installing your games on your HDD drive.
Thank you very much for the reponse and here are the results, doesn't really seem like a bottleneck if I compare to other people from videos/online. I've ran this with bad fps during RDR2. And don't have any frame limiters or something on:
https://ibb.co/KzygQ07
https://ibb.co/4dRqr6G
 
Your PresentMon result don't show anything really striking and busy times are really close indeed. But you say that it's fine when running benchmarks? When you run Heaven how is your GPU usage? If it reaches 98-99% then you can rule out your GPU power delivery hypothesis. And make sure your card is back to the top PCIe slot.
 
AMD CPUs for a long time were infamous for not providing competitive gaming performance compared to Intel CPUs. They were well-priced and good at productivity, but gaming performance was lacking. This changed with the Ryzen 5000 series of CPUs.

The Ryzen 3600 has been the subject of countless “Is my CPU bottlenecking me?” threads on these forums. Time and time again it has been shown that individuals were CPU limited and benefited significantly from a CPU upgrade.

“I can explain in to you, but I can’t understand it for you.” - Anonymous