

Your graphics card will perform at its best when it’s running nice and cool. One component running too hot can cause the internal temperature of your computer (in an enclosed case) to rise higher than it should. Keeping the components in your computer cool is essential to preserve the overall longevity of your system.

To speed up graphics card fans, install MSI Afterburner and create a fan speed profile based on the temperature of the GPU.

This can often fix the issue in some cases. > If you run into an issue where the fan doesn't seem to change to higher RPMs as the temps rise above 60-70*C or so, what most OEM suggest here is to download and install (or reinstall) the latest available BIOS version for your exact laptop model. > If your laptop is under warranty from the manufacture, contact them and have them replace the heatsink+fan+thermal paste if this is failing. Even if the intake area looks cleaned, there could be dust build-up elsewhere. In most laptop desgins, the fan usually only lasts about 1-2 years in most especially when actually used for gaming an the fan gets used alot at those higher RPMs, the fan will wear out, simple as that. If your system is Intel / NVIDIA mixed setup and is having random issues when not reaching 95*C or above, then most likely it is an issue with your Heatsink/Fan/Thermal Compound. U can't control the CPU/GPU Fan simple as that, it has a hardcoded firmware based preset within the BIOS that controls the fan speed curve, based on temps.
