On Ryzen systems, it might be a problem when PBO/PBO2 are enabled, in which case disabling PBO (Precision boost overdrive, which is AMD's "automatic overclocking profile" in plain terms) might be a necessary step. Usually it only becomes a problem when overclocking. It's only a problem, IF it becomes a problem. Again, ALL systems experience some amount of vdroop. At stock settings the vdroop seen is generally normal (Unless you have seen, and confirmed, through voltage adjustments to CPU core voltage, that it is causing instability) and should not be a problem. And vdroop being experienced at the default stock settings is either normal OR there is a problem with the motherboard in which case you should consider replacement with a higher quality model. Other than that, there isn't much you can do to correct on a board that lacks LLC settings in the BIOS. To some degree you can improve stability concerns resulting from vdroop by increasing core voltage very slightly (So long as there is both thermal and electrical headroom to safely do so) on boards that allow core voltage adjustments but lack LLC settings. It's not "a problem" unless it is happening to the degree that the system is becoming unstable.
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