It seems you're experiencing issues. Could you clarify what you need help with?
It seems you're experiencing issues. Could you clarify what you need help with?
I'm facing a serious problem with Fortnite crashing after every other match. Over the past few months, during second match play, the game would suddenly stop and prompt me to reach out to Fortnite's support team. I'm unsure why this keeps happening. My usual settings are 4K at 144Hz, but I've lowered the resolution and graphics to medium to see if it resolves the issue. I've reinstalled the game multiple times, changed drives, updated drivers, and even replaced my SSD. Temperatures are normal while playing. The CPU stays between 65-75°C and GPU between 35-55°C. I've attached my specifications for reference. No other games like Cyberpunk, Rivals, or Forza seem affected. If anyone has advice or suggestions, I'd really appreciate it.
It seems like you're suggesting a quick fix for the video settings. Try resetting them now or press the recommended option.
9:42 AM recorded. Open Event Viewer via the search bar on the Start menu. Check for hardware or driver-related events.
Updated GPU and firmware versions available. Current SSD software is latest. AMD driver support confirmed.
This problem is linked to Nvidia's present drivers. Go back to driver version 561.09.
There are two separate problems to address: 1) Fortnite frequently stops during gameplay. The game may ask you to change to DX11 mode if your driver causes these interruptions, especially for users with certain chip numbers. 2) Fortnite crashes when Easy AntiCheat conflicts with Windows 24H2 on Raptor Lake and newer (12th gen Intel and beyond). Fixing this requires more complex steps and some trial and error. If the game fails before you begin a match, your core isolation settings should be either fully enabled or completely disabled. With LSA protection off, but other settings active, EAC will likely end the session early. This became clear after discussing anti-cheat issues on a forum thread. The EAC blocks kernel-mode hardware protections, so disabling everything resolves the issue. A recent Microsoft update stopped EAC from installing on Windows 24H2, which helped. Some troubleshooters suggested reinstalling EAC, but that didn’t work consistently. After several restarts and testing with a streaming service, the problem resolved. This is how I learned about the driver prompt—it appeared only after reaching the "all on" setting.