Another one called GPU Temp does a nice very nice graph over the GPU temperature and does a chart from when the program is started, but doesn't show load or CPU temperature/load. It also only monitored the GPU, otherwise it was a step in the right direction. You can also use it to change your in-game settings or fan speed. It is the best software to monitor the performance of your GPU while playing a game including the GPU temperature. I tried GPU-Z, but it had such tiny graphs that didn't show the values, and only logged a few minutes. MSI Afterburner claims to be the most used graphic card software. There is probably something out there that does all of this, but I haven't found it when googling. Must be able to log over a longer time, preferably at least 30 minutes, not just 1-5 minutes.Must have graphs that are large enough to show the values As a general rule of thumb, if your GPU temperatures range between 80 to 85 ☌, it’s a perfectly normal temperature while gaming.To access the BIOS: Turn on or restart your PC. Show In Video/Stream Output Set whether the metrics overlay appears in Video/stream output, while playing Fullscreen games. The easiest way to check the CPU temperature is through your motherboard’s BIOS. It would be nice with software doing graphs, so I can see how it varied during the whole session. Sample Interval (s) - Adjust the polling rate for performance metrics in 0.25 second increments Show Metrics Overlay - Enable/disable on-screen overlay metrics stats. I find it interesting to after a gaming session be able to see what GPU/CPU usage and temperatures I had when playing. Make sure the item you want to monitor has a white tick and then click it and near the bottom theres a. You can find different items in the 'Monitoring' tab. You then need to select what you want shown in the OSD. The best part about this utility is that it can show the temperature of your CPU and your GPU ON-SCREEN WHILE gaming. I included a screenshot and link in the post for anyone interested. MSI Afterburner shows just an offset, the real voltage is like 1.10V by default, but with offset you can increase it or decrease it. As I wrote in this post I found what I was looking for, but I'll leave this thread open for anyone looking for something similar.
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