F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming This action initiates a restart of the Apex Legends game on your PC.

This action initiates a restart of the Apex Legends game on your PC.

This action initiates a restart of the Apex Legends game on your PC.

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Podekupine
Junior Member
1
05-21-2025, 01:28 AM
#1
My friend recently assembled his PC and immediately installed apex. After loading into a game, the machine would power off and restart repeatedly. We attempted this several times without success. The issue seems to occur only in the training mode, possibly due to player count. We also tried valorant but experienced no crashes or restarts.
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Podekupine
05-21-2025, 01:28 AM #1

My friend recently assembled his PC and immediately installed apex. After loading into a game, the machine would power off and restart repeatedly. We attempted this several times without success. The issue seems to occur only in the training mode, possibly due to player count. We also tried valorant but experienced no crashes or restarts.

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Buns_of_Steel
Member
217
05-21-2025, 05:45 AM
#2
Sure, just let us know what PSU and mobo you have. Cheers
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Buns_of_Steel
05-21-2025, 05:45 AM #2

Sure, just let us know what PSU and mobo you have. Cheers

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Kunall
Member
205
05-22-2025, 08:22 AM
#3
n7-b550
and EVGA 750w
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Kunall
05-22-2025, 08:22 AM #3

n7-b550
and EVGA 750w

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Darrionat
Junior Member
15
05-24-2025, 08:09 AM
#4
Which specific model of PSU is it? It seems likely a problem with the PSU itself. Frequent restarts, especially under load like gaming, could indicate an issue. A 750w unit is a decent baseline, but if it's outdated—more than three years old—it might be contributing to your problems. Not all 750w PSUs are created the same. You might also want to test your RAM outside of Windows using memtest86+ to confirm the DIMMS are functioning properly. Updating your BIOS could also help eliminate potential causes.
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Darrionat
05-24-2025, 08:09 AM #4

Which specific model of PSU is it? It seems likely a problem with the PSU itself. Frequent restarts, especially under load like gaming, could indicate an issue. A 750w unit is a decent baseline, but if it's outdated—more than three years old—it might be contributing to your problems. Not all 750w PSUs are created the same. You might also want to test your RAM outside of Windows using memtest86+ to confirm the DIMMS are functioning properly. Updating your BIOS could also help eliminate potential causes.

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PhantasiaOG
Junior Member
30
05-24-2025, 01:18 PM
#5
He revised the bios and achieved the same outcome using Apex; he also verified RougeCompany, which functioned properly. His PSU is a NZXT 750w Gold standard.
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PhantasiaOG
05-24-2025, 01:18 PM #5

He revised the bios and achieved the same outcome using Apex; he also verified RougeCompany, which functioned properly. His PSU is a NZXT 750w Gold standard.