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GPU driver

GPU driver

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165
01-30-2023, 02:58 AM
#1
The issue began with a problem in my graphics driver, which was first reported on that forum link. I followed all the suggested steps but didn't resolve it and even made things worse. The system started to blue screen frequently, and games wouldn't run properly through the GPU. I also tried a reset, but it had no effect. Please help me!
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Chrysanthemum9
01-30-2023, 02:58 AM #1

The issue began with a problem in my graphics driver, which was first reported on that forum link. I followed all the suggested steps but didn't resolve it and even made things worse. The system started to blue screen frequently, and games wouldn't run properly through the GPU. I also tried a reset, but it had no effect. Please help me!

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61
01-30-2023, 03:14 AM
#2
Hey there! Are you looking for help with a system issue? I checked the details—System Restore and a fresh install of drivers didn’t solve the problem with the crashing file. Could you share your system specifications?
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Libxcoleman123
01-30-2023, 03:14 AM #2

Hey there! Are you looking for help with a system issue? I checked the details—System Restore and a fresh install of drivers didn’t solve the problem with the crashing file. Could you share your system specifications?

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basketball97
Member
62
01-31-2023, 12:50 AM
#3
Download DDU from Guru3d.com and install the newest GPU drivers. Turn off internet connection. Restart Windows in safe mode (you might need your login PIN or password). Use DDU to remove the driver, note that choosing Nvidia DDU also deletes the HD Audio driver, but the Nvidia package will reinstall it later. Restart again and verify it uses the Microsoft basic display driver. If not, try safe mode again (usually only needed once). Install the drivers you downloaded earlier. Reconnect to the internet. Restart if necessary. It should work fine afterward.
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basketball97
01-31-2023, 12:50 AM #3

Download DDU from Guru3d.com and install the newest GPU drivers. Turn off internet connection. Restart Windows in safe mode (you might need your login PIN or password). Use DDU to remove the driver, note that choosing Nvidia DDU also deletes the HD Audio driver, but the Nvidia package will reinstall it later. Restart again and verify it uses the Microsoft basic display driver. If not, try safe mode again (usually only needed once). Install the drivers you downloaded earlier. Reconnect to the internet. Restart if necessary. It should work fine afterward.

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Lottie_
Member
59
01-31-2023, 06:27 AM
#4
To everyone who replied, thank you. I actually ran it three times with the DDU and had to reinstall drivers more than 20 times.
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Lottie_
01-31-2023, 06:27 AM #4

To everyone who replied, thank you. I actually ran it three times with the DDU and had to reinstall drivers more than 20 times.

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EmperorDerp
Junior Member
8
01-31-2023, 08:01 AM
#5
Are you aware of the latest Windows updates? There were problems with a recent update a few weeks back that got fixed in an updated WU, resolving those issues. Another idea I had was to test the graphics card on another machine and see if it crashes there. Have you tried running sfc /scannow via Command Prompt (as administrator)? It will scan for any Windows corruption.
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EmperorDerp
01-31-2023, 08:01 AM #5

Are you aware of the latest Windows updates? There were problems with a recent update a few weeks back that got fixed in an updated WU, resolving those issues. Another idea I had was to test the graphics card on another machine and see if it crashes there. Have you tried running sfc /scannow via Command Prompt (as administrator)? It will scan for any Windows corruption.