F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop You're experiencing a system crash. Please seek assistance immediately.

You're experiencing a system crash. Please seek assistance immediately.

You're experiencing a system crash. Please seek assistance immediately.

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LucasandClaus
Senior Member
438
05-31-2025, 12:44 AM
#1
Problem details - Windows crashes after playing specific games for a while. Games triggering the crash are CS2, Rainbow Six Siege, Marvel Rivals. Games that don't cause issues are Valorant, Rocket League. (Installation location seems unrelated.) BSOD displays "Whea Uncorrectable Error" and the Event Viewer shows a fatal error. Component: Memory System (pre-built but many modules swapped). Windows 11 latest update, Ryzen 5 5600 GTX, 1080 Ti RAM, 3200mhz. Gigabyte A320M S2H motherboard, 500W power supply, SSDs included. CPU was upgraded from 2600x to 5600 before the problem. Motherboard works after BIOS update. Previous troubleshooting steps: Windows reinstall, GPU driver reinstall, CPU chipset reinstall. MB BIOS updated (F50-F55). Games reinstalled. New RAM added (upgraded to XMP for 3200mhz; older modules at 2666mhz work). Performance tests passed. Other fixes from Reddit research. Includes BSOD minidump and PERFMON output files. I’m in pain. Attached are the crash logs.
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LucasandClaus
05-31-2025, 12:44 AM #1

Problem details - Windows crashes after playing specific games for a while. Games triggering the crash are CS2, Rainbow Six Siege, Marvel Rivals. Games that don't cause issues are Valorant, Rocket League. (Installation location seems unrelated.) BSOD displays "Whea Uncorrectable Error" and the Event Viewer shows a fatal error. Component: Memory System (pre-built but many modules swapped). Windows 11 latest update, Ryzen 5 5600 GTX, 1080 Ti RAM, 3200mhz. Gigabyte A320M S2H motherboard, 500W power supply, SSDs included. CPU was upgraded from 2600x to 5600 before the problem. Motherboard works after BIOS update. Previous troubleshooting steps: Windows reinstall, GPU driver reinstall, CPU chipset reinstall. MB BIOS updated (F50-F55). Games reinstalled. New RAM added (upgraded to XMP for 3200mhz; older modules at 2666mhz work). Performance tests passed. Other fixes from Reddit research. Includes BSOD minidump and PERFMON output files. I’m in pain. Attached are the crash logs.

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Llabros
Senior Member
740
05-31-2025, 12:44 AM
#2
All dump files indicate a CPU hardware issue. You noted that Event Viewer reported memory problems, but in this case, it likely refers to the CPU cache rather than RAM. The details in the event log point to a detection location, not the actual fault site. For WHEA events, you need to examine the RawData section in the Details tab to understand the exact cause. If you're adjusting performance settings like overclocking or undervolting, consider removing them. Keep an eye on CPU temperature to ensure stability. Since your BIOS is relatively new, a firmware update might help, though it's uncertain. Your motherboard lacks recovery options, so a BIOS upgrade could brick it if something goes wrong. When analyzing the error packet in the dump file, it highlights a problem with L1 cache data reading. 5000 series AMD CPUs can experience this issue when voltage is slightly below optimal. I've found that applying a small voltage offset of +0.050v (please review carefully) to the SoC often resolves it. If your board doesn't support offsets, you might need guidance from the community or Discord. Other possible reasons include incorrect CPU placement or insufficient cooling pressure. The primary suspect remains a defective CPU; other factors are just possibilities.
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Llabros
05-31-2025, 12:44 AM #2

All dump files indicate a CPU hardware issue. You noted that Event Viewer reported memory problems, but in this case, it likely refers to the CPU cache rather than RAM. The details in the event log point to a detection location, not the actual fault site. For WHEA events, you need to examine the RawData section in the Details tab to understand the exact cause. If you're adjusting performance settings like overclocking or undervolting, consider removing them. Keep an eye on CPU temperature to ensure stability. Since your BIOS is relatively new, a firmware update might help, though it's uncertain. Your motherboard lacks recovery options, so a BIOS upgrade could brick it if something goes wrong. When analyzing the error packet in the dump file, it highlights a problem with L1 cache data reading. 5000 series AMD CPUs can experience this issue when voltage is slightly below optimal. I've found that applying a small voltage offset of +0.050v (please review carefully) to the SoC often resolves it. If your board doesn't support offsets, you might need guidance from the community or Discord. Other possible reasons include incorrect CPU placement or insufficient cooling pressure. The primary suspect remains a defective CPU; other factors are just possibilities.

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Bonnibel
Posting Freak
794
05-31-2025, 12:44 AM
#3
It looks like this motherboard has limited voltage flexibility. I'll run some tests with different components to verify if the CPU is functioning properly. Thanks.
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Bonnibel
05-31-2025, 12:44 AM #3

It looks like this motherboard has limited voltage flexibility. I'll run some tests with different components to verify if the CPU is functioning properly. Thanks.