Hello everyone,
I recently bought an all AMD build (Ryzen 7 7800x3d paired with an RT 6750 XT) and all have been going fair and well for about a week until yesterday when playing games is literally impossible as it crashes after 5/10 minutes of playtime. I have no idea what could cause this and how to fix this.
My specs are as follow:
CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D 4.2 GHz 8-Core Processor
CPU Cooler: Scythe Fuma 3 67.62 CFM CPU Cooler
Motherboard: MSI PRO B650-S WIFI ATX AM5 Motherboard
Memory: Patriot Viper Venom 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) DDR5-6000 CL36 Memory
Storage: Kingston NV2 1 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive
Video Card: XFX Speedster QICK 319 Core Radeon RX 6750 XT 12 GB Video Card
Case: Deepcool CC560 ATX Mid Tower Case
Power Supply: SeaSonic FOCUS GX 750 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply
The current driver version is: 23.12.1
Again, I have had no problems until yesterday... This is very frustrating as I just bought this PC on 23/12/2023...
I'm desperate guys, I'm in tears and shaking right now, I've spent too much money on this
bro take it to a repair shop or try running dism sfc cmds to see if the problem where exists it might be your os
Relax, man. There's a 99% chance your PC is fine. The new December drivers made some really big changes and there seem to be stability issues. It sucks, but this happens sometimes, no matter which brand you choose. It's probably just a driver issue.
The first thing you can do is download the last driver update from November. Driver version numbers are Year.Month.Version. So it will be 2023.11.2 (2023.Nov.Ver 2) or something like that.
Download the drivers, install them and select the option to completely remove old driver software. It will take a few minutes. Restart and then see how it goes. Good luck.
Thank you for the reply, I wasn't really crying tho ngl
Where can I find the older drivers?
You can find old 6750 XT drivers from here: https://www.amd.com/en/support/previous-drivers/graphics/amd-radeon-rx-6000-series/amd-radeon-rx-670...
When you normally look for your drivers, on the most recent driver pages, there's a tiny link a little blow that says 'previous drivers'. Honestly just faster to google your GPU name + old drivers to find it.