
A little system tool called Chris-PC CPU Booster dynamically adjusts process priority at the Windows Task Scheduler level. It can schedule background tasks while keeping the running application’s attention and giving it the most CPU time possible.
You are welcome to try it if you want to change the load priority. Chris-PC CPU Booster is available for free download below. Since the program must be paid for, a crack or key file is included in the archive.
The program modifies process priority classes directly through the Windows API. The aggressiveness slider on the interface lets you move it into the safe zone to prevent freezing important system functions, or crank it up to maximum to gain a few additional frames per second in games. A fine-tuning module and an integrated synthetic benchmark are used to evaluate hardware performance.

What it is capable of:
- Adjust the active window’s Windows OS thread priorities dynamically
- show graphical information of processor load and resource distribution; control the ratio of foreground job performance to system stability; and use the integrated benchmark to measure processing power.
- Use custom lists to freeze background programs that aren’t essential.
I want you to keep in mind that the semiconductor is not physically overclocked by any “software boosters.” This program’s main goal is to automate a task that may be completed manually in Task Manager by right-clicking on a process and selecting “High Priority.” Its dynamic nature, which automatically adjusts priority as windows move, is its primary advantage.
Process Lasso, a well-known alternative, is a powerful process manager that helps allocate specific cores to critical tasks and tame CPU-hogging apps using its proprietary ProBalance algorithm. Another option is Razer Cortex, a gaming processor that physically unloads dozens of superfluous system services from RAM and adjusts priorities when starting a demanding game.


