F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming LiveKernelEvent 141 Exclusive to Hogwarts Legacy

LiveKernelEvent 141 Exclusive to Hogwarts Legacy

LiveKernelEvent 141 Exclusive to Hogwarts Legacy

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Liam_M_5000
Member
72
01-18-2024, 07:50 PM
#1
Hogwarts Legacy has been experiencing crashes since I began playing a few days ago, and the issues have intensified after updating to the Nvidia Geforce driver 536.67. The errors consistently appear as LiveKernelEvent 141. I've been using this computer for months, and it's the only game that regularly freezes.

I've attempted to run the game with both the Geforce Experience settings and the in-game recommended configurations after running benchmarks, but both lead to crashes.

Please find the link to my build if it might be useful.

Thank you ahead of time for any assistance you can offer.
L
Liam_M_5000
01-18-2024, 07:50 PM #1

Hogwarts Legacy has been experiencing crashes since I began playing a few days ago, and the issues have intensified after updating to the Nvidia Geforce driver 536.67. The errors consistently appear as LiveKernelEvent 141. I've been using this computer for months, and it's the only game that regularly freezes.

I've attempted to run the game with both the Geforce Experience settings and the in-game recommended configurations after running benchmarks, but both lead to crashes.

Please find the link to my build if it might be useful.

Thank you ahead of time for any assistance you can offer.

S
Superlettuce19
Senior Member
370
01-18-2024, 08:38 PM
#2
Consider trying to revert the GPU drivers and then assess the performance. I've heard some recent game updates might be causing problems, though I'm not entirely certain. You could use the DDU tool if necessary. What other applications have you installed on this system? Are they resource-intensive? They seem to function without issues.
S
Superlettuce19
01-18-2024, 08:38 PM #2

Consider trying to revert the GPU drivers and then assess the performance. I've heard some recent game updates might be causing problems, though I'm not entirely certain. You could use the DDU tool if necessary. What other applications have you installed on this system? Are they resource-intensive? They seem to function without issues.