System experienced significant instability following five minutes of gaming.
System experienced significant instability following five minutes of gaming.
Played smoothly with consistent CPU usage. No significant spikes detected.
depends on the situation inside the game as well... that's why these problems don't always appear. I faced quite similar issues in MH World until I upgraded my hardware, but the GPU driver crashing seems more serious (though it rarely happened to me). The NVIDIA drivers seem to handle this better. Would you like me to disable any adrenaline recording features? When I used an AMD GPU, it happened often only when screen recording was active. Eventually I had to give up the GPU because I record everything, and instant replay is always on.
It appears unrelated to game events; instability can occur at any time—starting a match, moving across the map, or even during training. Recording features are turned off to the greatest extent possible, and I haven't engaged with them yet.
It seems the BIOS RAM configurations didn't resolve the issue. Previous driver updates from August and AMD Pro drivers didn't help. Switching to the alternate GPU BIOS worked on my card, but not with the current setup. Disabling all AMD features and performing a clean Windows install also failed. It appears the hardware might be faulty—would it be worth replacing the GPU or PSU?
Check for voltage stability, performance consistency, and communication signals. Use diagnostic tools to verify proper operation before replacing the PSU.
The concept with the RAM seemed promising... consider turning off xmp/expo entirely, perhaps also resetting the CMOS and testing again... it’s not a guaranteed fix, just typical problems with Ryzen memory controllers, which can be quite sensitive... but this shouldn’t deter you right now. Our first step is to verify if the issue persists, so we’ll skip the expo and CMOS reset.
I restored the CMOS and rechecked the RAM configurations to confirm XMP and EXPO weren’t active, yet the problem persisted (now resulting in a complete system crash). Your efforts have been appreciated. It seems you’ve exhausted all options except replacing the power supply and testing the GPU on another machine. Before proceeding with a PSU upgrade, would it help to replace it with a higher wattage unit? Alternatively, you could leverage your return policy and send the unit back for a different setup.