Yes, I can handle that.
Yes, I can handle that.
Check Event Viewer first to identify the BSOD cause, then determine the problem area.
Navigate to the event viewer and confirm your system specifications.
BSODs usually don't appear in the event viewer, just a Kernel Power event marked as critical. That gives no useful info. A bluescreen viewer would let you check the saved minidumps directly. BlueScreenView is a solid choice.
Or select bluescreenview with a positive response. Even if you often get identical outcomes by narrowing the view, it still works.
Without a minidump, the system restarts before saving files to disk. This means a BSOD with no evidence. Sadly, that’s the end. Now is a perfect moment to share your system details, including the power supply information (make and model, not just wattage).
just a laptop specs: intel i5 7200u (up to 3.1g), nvidia gt 940m x, 8gb ram, 1tb hdd. played team fortress 2 and counter strike global offensive.