F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming CSGO causes issues with my drivers.

CSGO causes issues with my drivers.

CSGO causes issues with my drivers.

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BlueBaery
Member
229
06-07-2021, 09:54 AM
#1
It was about two years ago I acquired a modest setup for around twenty-five dollars. It included a CRT monitor, a mouse and keyboard, an Intel Pentium Dual Core E5300 processor at 2.6 GHz, a Q45 chipset (X4500 GMA), 2 GB of RAM (now expanded to 4), and a 160 GB hard drive. My first steps were to format the drive and install Steam to check game compatibility. I played Half-Life 2, which performed well; Portal 2 was playable but required lowering settings for a smooth experience. Later, I tried Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, which ran smoothly with 2 GB RAM and Windows 7; I used an integrated graphics card.

Since my primary laptop stopped working, I moved to a PC and am now quite content. I’ve used it for running older games and browsing the web. I re-downloaded CS:GO to test it, but it didn’t launch properly. The RAM usage stayed high, swapping aggressively, and when maps loaded offline without bots it would freeze or crash. I experimented with Lubuntu, which allowed a RAM increase to around 1800 MB, but the issue persisted. Adding another 2 GB didn’t resolve it, though it reduced swapping somewhat. During map loading, CS:GO’s RAM usage peaked at about 940 MB, and when the screen went black I had to press Ctrl+Alt+Del to exit before a BSOD appeared.

I attempted OEM drivers from Fujitsu (2009-2012) and the latest Intel drivers for that chipset, including video support. I also tried modified PHDGD drivers, but nothing worked. On Lubuntu, I managed around 15 frames per second in competitive play, though there were many frustrations—lower FPS, laggy movement, and inconsistent frame rates. The Linux environment didn’t suit my preferences. I set the game to windowed mode, and when a map finished loading it would flash a black screen with messages about the display driver.

Help would be greatly appreciated, especially since I can run games on Windows and definitely on Linux. Thanks a lot!
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BlueBaery
06-07-2021, 09:54 AM #1

It was about two years ago I acquired a modest setup for around twenty-five dollars. It included a CRT monitor, a mouse and keyboard, an Intel Pentium Dual Core E5300 processor at 2.6 GHz, a Q45 chipset (X4500 GMA), 2 GB of RAM (now expanded to 4), and a 160 GB hard drive. My first steps were to format the drive and install Steam to check game compatibility. I played Half-Life 2, which performed well; Portal 2 was playable but required lowering settings for a smooth experience. Later, I tried Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, which ran smoothly with 2 GB RAM and Windows 7; I used an integrated graphics card.

Since my primary laptop stopped working, I moved to a PC and am now quite content. I’ve used it for running older games and browsing the web. I re-downloaded CS:GO to test it, but it didn’t launch properly. The RAM usage stayed high, swapping aggressively, and when maps loaded offline without bots it would freeze or crash. I experimented with Lubuntu, which allowed a RAM increase to around 1800 MB, but the issue persisted. Adding another 2 GB didn’t resolve it, though it reduced swapping somewhat. During map loading, CS:GO’s RAM usage peaked at about 940 MB, and when the screen went black I had to press Ctrl+Alt+Del to exit before a BSOD appeared.

I attempted OEM drivers from Fujitsu (2009-2012) and the latest Intel drivers for that chipset, including video support. I also tried modified PHDGD drivers, but nothing worked. On Lubuntu, I managed around 15 frames per second in competitive play, though there were many frustrations—lower FPS, laggy movement, and inconsistent frame rates. The Linux environment didn’t suit my preferences. I set the game to windowed mode, and when a map finished loading it would flash a black screen with messages about the display driver.

Help would be greatly appreciated, especially since I can run games on Windows and definitely on Linux. Thanks a lot!

M
MarioCovrigel
Member
195
06-07-2021, 09:54 AM
#2
You need more RAM and a Core2Quad would be beneficial. What is your GPU?
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MarioCovrigel
06-07-2021, 09:54 AM #2

You need more RAM and a Core2Quad would be beneficial. What is your GPU?

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sydneyyyyyy
Senior Member
396
06-07-2021, 09:54 AM
#3
iGPU is the issue there. It doesn't have enough RAM dedicated for use. Easiest fix would be getting some used GPU, 750Ti at most as newer will be bottlenecked hard by CPU. Also quad core would help, but I don't see that such issue with CSGO.
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sydneyyyyyy
06-07-2021, 09:54 AM #3

iGPU is the issue there. It doesn't have enough RAM dedicated for use. Easiest fix would be getting some used GPU, 750Ti at most as newer will be bottlenecked hard by CPU. Also quad core would help, but I don't see that such issue with CSGO.

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akjosh47
Member
190
06-07-2021, 09:54 AM
#4
My GPU is an Intel GMA X4500. I’ve upgraded to 4GB RAM now, but running games in Linux Man is still rough. When launching a game, my RAM usage stays around 3GB. I just installed Windows 10 about 30 minutes ago and added PHDGD since there are no official drivers for Win10 on the IGPU. I’m downloading CSGO ATM and will let you know in about two hours once it’s done, considering my slow internet speed.
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akjosh47
06-07-2021, 09:54 AM #4

My GPU is an Intel GMA X4500. I’ve upgraded to 4GB RAM now, but running games in Linux Man is still rough. When launching a game, my RAM usage stays around 3GB. I just installed Windows 10 about 30 minutes ago and added PHDGD since there are no official drivers for Win10 on the IGPU. I’m downloading CSGO ATM and will let you know in about two hours once it’s done, considering my slow internet speed.

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vikkiii
Member
182
06-07-2021, 09:55 AM
#5
Check the amount of RAM allocated to the iGPU. It’s likely defaulting to 512MB. Open the BIOS settings and adjust it to around 1GB.
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vikkiii
06-07-2021, 09:55 AM #5

Check the amount of RAM allocated to the iGPU. It’s likely defaulting to 512MB. Open the BIOS settings and adjust it to around 1GB.

V
Venice_
Member
61
06-07-2021, 09:55 AM
#6
I don't see an option in my BIOS for it since it's an OEM PC, but I'll look into it just in case. This is what Windows 10 says.
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Venice_
06-07-2021, 09:55 AM #6

I don't see an option in my BIOS for it since it's an OEM PC, but I'll look into it just in case. This is what Windows 10 says.

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Xytrixz
Senior Member
552
06-07-2021, 09:55 AM
#7
This 128MB issue stems from insufficient memory and crashes. Video buffer empties, leading to BSOD in Windows. Linux manages resources differently, avoiding crashes by reallocating assets. Have you checked the BIOS settings? You might not realize what options exist. Generally, a dedicated GPU would resolve it. Systems with under 1GB VRAM remain affordable since they aren't heavily used for mining.
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Xytrixz
06-07-2021, 09:55 AM #7

This 128MB issue stems from insufficient memory and crashes. Video buffer empties, leading to BSOD in Windows. Linux manages resources differently, avoiding crashes by reallocating assets. Have you checked the BIOS settings? You might not realize what options exist. Generally, a dedicated GPU would resolve it. Systems with under 1GB VRAM remain affordable since they aren't heavily used for mining.

D
DerNeueDoktor
Member
156
06-07-2021, 09:55 AM
#8
I have those choices, this comes from the phone. I changed it to dvmt and maxdvmt, wondering if that helps.
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DerNeueDoktor
06-07-2021, 09:55 AM #8

I have those choices, this comes from the phone. I changed it to dvmt and maxdvmt, wondering if that helps.

D
Doggplant
Junior Member
22
06-07-2021, 09:55 AM
#9
It seems the system should utilize RAM as virtual memory instead of freezing drivers. Previously, with the default driver it displayed 64MB VRAM, but using PHPGD showed 128MB. Even after setting VRAM to maximum, it still reported 128MB.
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Doggplant
06-07-2021, 09:55 AM #9

It seems the system should utilize RAM as virtual memory instead of freezing drivers. Previously, with the default driver it displayed 64MB VRAM, but using PHPGD showed 128MB. Even after setting VRAM to maximum, it still reported 128MB.

1
1CraftyGirl
Member
100
06-07-2021, 09:55 AM
#10
It should work, but we're dealing with hardware that lacks supported drivers. I'm not sure what else I know, so I'll stick to my main suggestion of using a dedicated GPU. iGPUs weren't reliable before the Core i-series, which is why I pushed for a dedicated GPU in my previous laptop so I could play BF2.
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1CraftyGirl
06-07-2021, 09:55 AM #10

It should work, but we're dealing with hardware that lacks supported drivers. I'm not sure what else I know, so I'll stick to my main suggestion of using a dedicated GPU. iGPUs weren't reliable before the Core i-series, which is why I pushed for a dedicated GPU in my previous laptop so I could play BF2.

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