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Hello again I’m Rodney Reynolds from 3dgameman.com. Please remember to support us at support3gm.com. This next question is about Video Card Artifacting.
Now, Video Card Artifacting happens for a number of reasons and usually the fault of the video card. It’s a pixilated colored mess on the screen and I fit happens to you, power down your computer system right away then power back up and hopefully it will be gone.
In most cases, it will be because in most cases it’s related to a few things. Either your room temperature is too warm. It should be normal around 25 degrees Celsius. Maybe your case does not have proper air circulation or maybe you do have lots of fans but maybe the dust filters are all climbed up so check all of that and make sure there is adequate air circulation throughout the case. And also if you’re over clocking, lower the over clock on the GPU and or the memory.
The other issue of course is that it’s a defective video card. Now, Mike has some issues here. Sometimes he’s playing for five hours plus of constant game play and there’s no artifact. Sometimes it’s just five minutes and there’s an artifact. He swapped out a power supply thing and tried a few other things and also contacted EPGA assistances and EPGA video card as spam about how to resolve this. But they have not and he has not been able to resolve this.
So my trial at things that I just mentioned, it just might be a defected video card. I mean it happens. Not very often but it does happen. I’ve a defecting almost every other video card that I reviewed because I’m pushing them to the limit. I’m over clocking the GPU and the memory and artifacts happen. And normally, all you do is just reboot the computer system and they go away because in most cases, it is related to an over clocking issue or a heat related issue.
I hope it answers your question and keep your questions coming.
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