The same guy who made DDU also built this surprisingly effective tiny RAM tool

If you’ve ever had a game crash out of nowhere with no error message, there’s a good chance memory leaks are to blame. I’ve run into this with Horizon Zero Dawn when it first launched on PC, Escape from Tarkov, and more recently Grey Zone Warfare—games that chew through RAM until they eventually crash. Tweaking your RAM settings can help in some scenarios, but it won’t clear out the cached data Windows keeps hoarding in the background.

That’s where Intelligent Standby List Cleaner (ISLC) comes in. It’s a small, portable tool from WagnardSoft—the same developer behind Display Driver Uninstaller (DDU)—that automatically purges Windows’ standby memory list when it crosses a threshold you set. Some call it snake oil, but personally, I’ve seen it fix crashes when nothing else would for games with poor memory management.

How does ISLC work

It clears cached memory before problems start

ilsc app showing total and use memory on Windows 11
Tashreef Shareef / MakeUseOf
Credit: Tashreef Shareef / MakeUseOf

Windows uses something called the standby list to cache recently used data. If you might need that data again, keeping it in RAM speeds things up. Sounds good, and for the most part, Windows does a pretty good job of managing the standby list. But this caching can become an issue during gaming sessions when Windows fails to clear the cache fast enough. When a game suddenly needs more RAM, Windows has to dump that cached data on the spot—and that’s when you notice stutters or brief freezes.

If you check the Task Manager, it won’t show anything wrong. You’ll see plenty of available memory because Windows counts the standby list as technically available. But available isn’t the same as free. When your game needs memory fast, converting standby memory back to free memory takes time, and that delay causes hitching.

ISLC tries to fix this by monitoring two things: how big your standby list has grown and how much truly free memory remains. When both hit thresholds you define, it automatically purges the standby list before your game starts choking. It’s a preemptive fix rather than a reactive one.

Configuring ISLC for your system

ISLC is a portable app, so you don’t need to install another app on your already bloated PC. Download the ISLC installer from WagnardSoft’s website, extract it, and run the executable. The interface shows your current free memory and standby list size in real time.

Here, two settings matter the most. “The list size is at least” tells ISLC how big the standby list should get before it considers cleaning. And “Free memory is lower than” sets the minimum free RAM threshold that triggers a purge. Both conditions need to be true before ISLC clears anything.

The recommended values scale with your total RAM. For 16GB systems, set List size is at least to 1024 MB and Free memory is lower than to 2048 MB. With 32GB, bump those to 2048 MB and 4096 MB respectively. For 64GB systems, use 4096 MB and 8192 MB. It’s an obvious pattern: systems with more memory can tolerate larger standby lists before running into trouble.

Once configured, tick the boxes for “Start ISLC minimized and auto-start monitoring” and “Launch ISLC on user logon” so it runs automatically in the background. You can also enable the custom timer resolution feature set to 0.5 ms for slightly tighter frame timing. However, this is optional, and the memory cleanup alone handles most stutter issues.

If something goes wrong or your system feels off after running ISLC, just close it. There are no permanent changes to undo, as ISLC only clears cached data that Windows would eventually release anyway. You can also restore default settings by deleting the configuration file in the ISLC folder and restarting the program.

Is it worth using?

A valuable tool for specific situations

Lossless Scaling Fallout 76 Credit: Shaun Cichacki/MUO

ISLC isn’t for everyone; no tool is. It’s not a magic wand either. If your system has 32GB or more of RAM and you’re not experiencing stutters, you probably don’t need it. Windows handles memory well enough on systems with headroom to spare. The same applies if you primarily use your PC for browsing, office work, or light tasks where the standby list rarely causes problems outside of memory-intensive scenarios.

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But if you game on a system with 8-16GB of RAM and notice occasional hitches that don’t correlate with GPU or CPU load, ISLC is worth trying. I’ve gone from regular crashes every 90 minutes to multi-hour sessions without issues after configuring ISLC properly.

As for the things that might go wrong, they’re negligible. At worse, some programs might launch slightly slower because you cleared cached data that Windows would have used to speed up loading. That’s a minor tradeoff for smoother gameplay. ISLC uses about 27 MB of RAM and virtually no CPU so that it won’t add overhead to your system.

Wagnardsoft Tools logo transparent

OS

Windows

Price model

Free

ISLC automatically clears Windows standby memory to prevent stutters, crashes, and RAM shortages, keeping games and apps smooth without manual tweaking or risky system changes during heavy workloads and gaming.


A band-aid, not a cure

ISLC works well as a workaround, but it’s worth understanding how it works. If your games stutter despite having adequate RAM, clearing the standby list treats the symptom rather than the cause. Outdated drivers, background processes, or games with memory leaks might be the real issues. Tools like LatencyMon can help identify misbehaving drivers that cause DPC latency spikes, which is a common source of micro-stutters that ISLC won’t fix.

That said, ISLC gives you a quick, reversible way to test whether standby memory is your problem. Download it, configure it for your RAM size, and run it during a gaming session. If your stutters disappear, you’ve found your fix. If they persist, no harm done.

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