Pc Building Simulator 2 3dmark Calculator Fixed [exclusive] ★ Direct

| Problem | Fix | |--------|-----| | Score too low with high-end CPUs | Use instead of all-core clock | | Overclocking not affecting score | Add +50 MHz = +2.5% GPU score scaling | | RAM speed ignored | DDR5-6000 adds 8% to CPU score | | SLI/Crossfire not calculating | Second GPU adds only 40–60% of first GPU's score |

However, for several patches (versions 1.0 through 1.20), the calculator suffered from two critical errors: pc building simulator 2 3dmark calculator fixed

: Total RAM capacity (e.g., 16GB vs 32GB) does not affect the 3DMark score. However, the number of sticks (Dual Channel) and MHz speed do impact the CPU sub-score. | Problem | Fix | |--------|-----| | Score

So go ahead. Build that ridiculous dual-GPU setup. Undervolt your CPU for efficiency. Chase that top 100 leaderboard score. Just know that now, when the 3DMark number pops up, you’ve actually earned it. Build that ridiculous dual-GPU setup

In the intricate world of PC Building Simulator 2, the pursuit of the perfect build is driven by two distinct forces: the aesthetic satisfaction of cable management and RGB lighting, and the raw technical challenge of performance optimization. Central to the latter is the in-game benchmarking tool, 3DMark, which serves as the ultimate arbiter of a player’s engineering prowess. However, for a period following the game's release, the 3DMark calculator—a tool players relied upon to predict scores and complete career missions—was plagued by inaccuracies. The recent fix to this calculator has done more than simply correct a mathematical error; it has restored the integrity of the simulation, bridging the gap between guesswork and genuine hardware knowledge.

New builders can experiment: “What if I drop the CPU one tier but upgrade the GPU?” The score shifts realistically. That’s a lesson that costs $0 in hardware.