Stuttering/FPS drop consistently on Ryzen 5 2400G

Jul 22, 2018
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Hello everyone,

So earlier this year I've bought components to build a new pc, here are the parts.

MSI Gaming AMD Ryzen B350
EVGA 500 W1, 80+ WHITE 500W
WD Blue 1TB SATA 6 Gb/s 7200 RPM 64MB Cache 3.5 Inch Desktop Hard Drive
Ballistix Sport LT 8GB Kit (4GBx2) DDR4 2400 MT/s (4 sticks x 4gb)
AMD Ryzen 5 2400G Processor with Radeon RX Vega 11 Graphics
Cooler Master MasterBox Pro 5
Windows 10 Home

Initially I only had 8Gb of ram, and had some major stuttering/frame rate drops in games like League of Legends, Minecraft, Fortnite, Warframe, and whatnot. So thinking ram was the issue, I upgraded with another ram kit now hitting 16gbs. Unfortunately, that did not seem to remedy the problem and I still encounter fps/stuttering problems. Is there a setting I need to change on my computer, bios, etc? All of the settings are pretty much default so I have no idea what I should change in order to fix this, In addition, all of the games listed are being run at low/medium. Would I have to overclock in order to reach stability? I'm pretty new to all of this so any information pertaining PC's and settings are appreciated, as well as constructive criticism.

Thank you for your time.
 
Solution
What caught my eye was in the second to last paragraph above the chart.

Overall seems to be many factors involved including the "big catch"....

Yes you need to look at all the specs and ensure that all components will work well together or otherwise at least configurable to do so.

Performance very likely limited by some "slowest" component.

Resource Monitor may help identify the bottleneck.


What am I looking for..? It just gives me tests, unless you’re saying my specs will only reach their results as max
 
What caught my eye was in the second to last paragraph above the chart.

Overall seems to be many factors involved including the "big catch"....

Yes you need to look at all the specs and ensure that all components will work well together or otherwise at least configurable to do so.

Performance very likely limited by some "slowest" component.

Resource Monitor may help identify the bottleneck.
 
Solution