I've tried everything
I've tried everything
Hello humans,
I have almost every method I could think of tried to fix my PC. Just a month ago everything was functioning perfectly. But when I changed my monitor from 60hz to 144hz, four of my games started to fail. These games would crash right before they even began. Apex Legends would stop before the lobby. Spellbreak and R6 Siege would crash within a minute of starting. Finally, Pacify from Steam would crash about ten minutes into play. In all these cases, the game would simply close without crashing completely. To address this, I have:
downloaded my graphics drivers again
restarted the PC
runmed the Windows diagnostic on my RAM and it was clean
updated Windows
tried running Siege in Windows mode
removed all my antivirus programs
Currently I am using:
Ryzen 5 3600x 3.8Ghz
Wraith Stealer Stock Cooler
MSI b550 Gaming Edge (WiFi)
GeForce RTX 2070 (not overclocked)
16gb 3200 RAM
500gb NVME SSD
2TB HD
Powerspec 550 watt 80+ Bronze
Update: Valorant, a game that always worked, now stops working. It doesn’t crash, but I can’t even load it.
Please verify the CPU temperatures during a stress test; it seems this could be the issue.
This PSU has low quality, and it wouldn't be surprising if that's the problem.
while engaging in rainbow six siege and apex legends my processor temperatures remained between 60 and 80 degrees.
Bep bap boop... Ryzen 5 1600x không thường xuất hiện với tốc độ 3.8Ghz, gây ra tiếng sốt nóng lên 80 độ gần mức nhiệt điều chỉnh throttle. Các giải pháp hỗ trợ:
- Đánh đổi BIOS về mặc định.
- Kiểm tra các tham số BIOS tuân thủ chuẩn AMD.
Kết thúc các giải pháp.
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Kết thúc thông tin.
I don't believe that since my PC never crashes, except for the games themselves. Also, I haven't experienced the blue screen of death before.
While playing games, the system experiences increased demand, which then raises the load on the power supply unit. A faulty power supply can lead to various issues beyond simple crashes.
Yeah but that would cause the GPU to crash because it wouldn't get enough power and he would receive a corresponding message about graphics driver recovery or something similar.
Straight out crash to desktop could be random as well.
Those games run on all cores and doubling the FPS the system needs to render will force the CPU to run at full capacity, and many motherboards have poor settings—like excessively high Vcore—and under stress it might just be too much.
I would consider adding a frame limiter to those games to check if crashes decrease when the CPU is less stressed.