🖥️🔑 Disclaimer: This post is not sponsored by PassMark. I just really like flat benchmarking graphs.
In the chaotic world of PC troubleshooting, guesswork is the enemy. And for years, I was losing the battle—until I bought a .
But if you care about your PC’s health, if you want to stop guessing and start knowing , skip the fancy AIO cooler this month. Spend the $30 on the key.
Was my score of 8,500 good? Bad? Average for a toaster?
One click in the BIOS later, I reran the test. My score jumped 22%. The stuttering vanished. The key paid for itself in that single moment. There is a strange, masochistic joy in running the Advanced 3D test on PassMark. It doesn't look like Cyberpunk 2077; it looks like a tech demo from 2012. But those simple, rotating shapes are mathematically designed to break your hardware.
Because the most expensive part of your PC isn't the GPU. It's the time you waste troubleshooting a problem you can't see.
We’ve all been there. You just dropped a month’s worth of coffee money on a new GPU, or you spent an evening carefully overclocking your CPU. You boot up your favorite game, and... it stutters. Is it the new driver? Is the RAM seated wrong? Did you just lose the "silicon lottery"?
Let me explain why spending $30 on a piece of software that tests your hardware is actually more satisfying than spending $300 on the hardware itself. Before I got the key, I operated on vibes. "Hmm, this render feels slow." "My frames are dropping; maybe my SSD is dying?" I would run free benchmarks, but they were usually stripped-down demos that gave me a number without any context.
🖥️🔑 Disclaimer: This post is not sponsored by PassMark. I just really like flat benchmarking graphs.
In the chaotic world of PC troubleshooting, guesswork is the enemy. And for years, I was losing the battle—until I bought a .
But if you care about your PC’s health, if you want to stop guessing and start knowing , skip the fancy AIO cooler this month. Spend the $30 on the key.
Was my score of 8,500 good? Bad? Average for a toaster?
One click in the BIOS later, I reran the test. My score jumped 22%. The stuttering vanished. The key paid for itself in that single moment. There is a strange, masochistic joy in running the Advanced 3D test on PassMark. It doesn't look like Cyberpunk 2077; it looks like a tech demo from 2012. But those simple, rotating shapes are mathematically designed to break your hardware.
Because the most expensive part of your PC isn't the GPU. It's the time you waste troubleshooting a problem you can't see.
We’ve all been there. You just dropped a month’s worth of coffee money on a new GPU, or you spent an evening carefully overclocking your CPU. You boot up your favorite game, and... it stutters. Is it the new driver? Is the RAM seated wrong? Did you just lose the "silicon lottery"?
Let me explain why spending $30 on a piece of software that tests your hardware is actually more satisfying than spending $300 on the hardware itself. Before I got the key, I operated on vibes. "Hmm, this render feels slow." "My frames are dropping; maybe my SSD is dying?" I would run free benchmarks, but they were usually stripped-down demos that gave me a number without any context.