
confirms day one patch for Hogwarts Legacy [.The second-highest traffic period for the Potter community on Fandom in recent years was during the 2018 release of the second “Fantastic Beasts” film. Hopefully, that fixes most of our problems. However, the day one patch is just around the corner. Hardware Unboxed just confirmed that the game isn't utilizing the CPU correctly when it comes to AMD, Hogwarts Legacy isn’t properly utilizing Zen 4 CPUs [. Especially for AMD processors apparently. Yes you would be correct in thinking that the game is not properly optimized. It just tends to stutter a lot when entering new areas. If the game still stutters on an SSD, then I guess the game is just not properly optimized on PC. Most "fixes" online doesn't seem to work either. You might notice some performance gain if playing on an SSD, though I am not really sure. I currently have the game installed on an NVMe-SSD(the Samsung 970 EVO Plus to be exact) and the stuttering still persists. The only difference is that I am using a Ryzen 9 3900X. Originally posted by Michael Transactions:We have quite similar specs. The game does not have a performance difference between my SSD and HDD. Either that or the game is not optimized on PC.ĭoes an SSD make a difference in performance in this game? Will the game stop stuttering if I switch it to my SSD?Įdit: Moving the game to my PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD, my OS drive, did not fix the stuttering and frame drops. Since this game stutters a lot when I already have an AMD Ryzen 7 5800X, an GeForce RTX 3070 Ti, and 32 GB of RAM, I think my HDD is causing the bottleneck. I only moved Dead Space to my SSD because the game is unplayable on an HDD. I prefer having all my games together on the large HDD of my computer instead of using my small-capacity SSD. Then there are those like Dead Space, where playing on an SSD is required because the game becomes a performance mess on an HDD. Some games like Cyberpunk 2077 recommend playing on an SSD and make no difference in performance.
