My name is Maxi, and I'm here to tell you the story of why I wanted to push my ASRock RX 6600 Challenger version. I admit that one of the reasons was ambition, but then it all came down to me. With the help of AI, after just a few messages, I learned everything, and I did most of it on my own. I managed to push this RX 6600 to its absolute limit as soon as I knew it had good silicon (thanks to the silicon lottery). You might ask, "Why this aggressive overclock?" Well, for a while, I felt inferior to my PS5 friends, who even made fun of me. Although it might seem immature, I decided on something specific: to surpass them, no matter the cost. I started without knowing anything, constantly testing, fixing, and trying again. I even managed to get 195W on this RX 6600. I kept going. I wanted more; I wanted to have the power to prove them wrong, until I learned everything. As soon as I discovered… I didn't stop, configuration after configuration, using MorePowerTool. Every BIOS file saved. Every failed attempt. I started this about a month ago. And I never stopped, until I finally understood how true overclocking works. And I managed to stabilize those 3000 MHz (not the effective speed) at 1200 MV with only 75 amps of GPU power, without causing much electrical noise, but without leaving the graphics card without power. I achieved 131W of consumption in games. And I decided to play a game that wasn't running so well, and that would really stress my graphics card: Fortnite. Not only because of Unreal Engine 5, but because sometimes you have a good FPS, but when you enter combat it drops drastically. It was perfect, everything epic, 60 stable fps at 1080p, 45 average at 1440p (AFMF 2.1 enabled, afmf 2.1 means FSR 2.1), which gave me 90 fps(half of them generated). I even reached 51 fps according to Fortnite. And obviously you're probably wondering, what about the state of my graphics card? What about the VRMs? Well, the backplate of my graphics card was metal, and as always, the VRMs were covered by a large piece of thermal pad. So, what did I do? I searched and searched, and I found a CPU fan, one of those used in Athlon 3000g processors. This one was missing its metal heatsink, or whatever it's called. So I cut off the excess (the protruding plastic where the screws go) and put it right on the metal backplate of my RX 6600, just so the airflow hits the VRMs. It was such an old-school setup that I used tape to hold it in place and connected the positive and negative wires of the fan to the 12V lines on my power supply. I really enjoyed it, because it was.. genius (or may not). I always wanted to have somethign better, and now I see I've gone from 8.93 teraflops to 10-11 (my calculations). Greetings from Argentina!