Good day,
Let me start off by stating that I am a fisrt-time AMD user, so my terminology may not be perfect.
OK, So I have an AMD Ryzen 5 2400G on an Asrock A320M-HDV R4.0 M/B, with 16GB RAM
Adrenaline Edition Version: 24.9.1
My problem is that I am trying to play a game called STALKERSOUP and every time I go into the game, I can play for about 5-10 minutes and then it crashes and AMD's Bug Report Tool pops up with the dreaded and all-too-familiar driver timeout issue and the game eventually black screens and after quite some time, may or may not crash to desktop, else I have to end the game task in Windows task manager So I have done the following:
1: Disabled Windows TDR. No difference
2: Reverted back to a previous version of Adrenaline Edition, drivers, V24.3.1. No difference
3: Updated M/B Bios. No difference
4: Installed ONLY the AMD iGPU drivers WITHOUT Adenaline Control Panel. No difference.
Now, BEFORE anyone asks irrelvant questions let me ALSO state:
1: ALL M/B drivers are installed and up-to-date
2: I have even tried re-installing Windows 11 and the game and NOTHING else and run the game, no difference.
Now, here is the kicker! I have an nVidia GT 730 VGA card and in a fit of desperation, I installed this card and well, WHAT A DIFFERENCE!!!
Game runs perfectly, no crashes and this is on high graphics settings. It puts the RX Vega 11 Graphics to shame, in fact.
So, it seems that even after all this time, AMD STILL have not been able to resolve their VGA driver issues. So sad.
Anyway, so I will be investing in a decent nVidia VGA card in the near future.
markadewet, where did you get your AMD drivers? If not here, please do. Post screenshots of the error you are seeing and the Details tab of a few Critical errors. It may be a little early to condemn AMD. See if a Clear CMOS helps. John.
@misterj, I ALWAYS download drivers from the manufacturers website, nowhere else.
As regards screenshots of the errors, I am now using an nVidia GT730 VGA card to play and I am not about to uninstall and re-install AMD drivers to get these screenshots.
Have you tried playing STALKER SoC without the mod to see if the problem is the mod?
Do you have the STEAM version of the game or a standalone install?
Have you tried the Complete 2009 1.4.4 mod?
@FunkZSTALKERSOUP is not a mod, it is now a complete stand-alone game.
It may be available as a stand-alone install (does not require the original game to play) but it is still a modified version of the STALKER game series.
I take it then you do not own any of the original STALKER games to compare how those play on your 2400G Radeon graphics? Have you tried the STALKER Complete mod?
The nVidia GT 730 is a 10 year old DirectX 11 card that is much closer spec-wise to hardware that was available when these games were released. Sometimes these old games simply do not run well on modern hardware. It can be handy to have a second system built just for retro gaming, or as you've discovered, a second card to use when you want to play those games.
@FunkZI do have all the original STALKER games (SoC, BS and CoP), but this game incorporates all 3 plus some specific choice mods to improve on both gameplay and storyline. It is FAR more interesting in story and gameplay and is a LOT more continuous in its play.
As regards my card being older hardware, you may very well be right that the game runs better on older hardware, albeit I have now upped my card to a GTX 1650, which is doing even better. I have had not ONE CTD since using nVidia so I can only suspect that you are on point with the hardware, specifically the grpahics hardware being more compatible with the game.
LOL, I would LOVE to have a second complete system for retro gaming, but being a pensioner does not allow that!! LMAO
Anyway, all is running fine now, so not going to fiddle any more. I am happy.
@markadewet wrote:Good day,
Let me start off by stating that I am a fisrt-time AMD user, so my terminology may not be perfect.
OK, So I have an AMD Ryzen 5 2400G on an Asrock A320M-HDV R4.0 M/B, with 16GB RAM
Adrenaline Edition Version: 24.9.1
My problem is that I am trying to play a game called STALKERSOUP and every time I go into the game, I can play for about 5-10 minutes and then it crashes and AMD's Bug Report Tool pops up with the dreaded and all-too-familiar driver timeout issue and the game eventually black screens and after quite some time, may or may not crash to desktop, else I have to end the game task in Windows task manager So I have done the following:
1: Disabled Windows TDR. No difference
2: Reverted back to a previous version of Adrenaline Edition, drivers, V24.3.1. No difference
3: Updated M/B Bios. No difference
4: Installed ONLY the AMD iGPU drivers WITHOUT Adenaline Control Panel. No difference.
Now, BEFORE anyone asks irrelvant questions let me ALSO state:
1: ALL M/B drivers are installed and up-to-date
2: I have even tried re-installing Windows 11 and the game and NOTHING else and run the game, no difference.
Now, here is the kicker! I have an nVidia GT 730 VGA card and in a fit of desperation, I installed this card and well, WHAT A DIFFERENCE!!!
Game runs perfectly, no crashes and this is on high graphics settings. It puts the RX Vega 11 Graphics to shame, in fact.
So, it seems that even after all this time, AMD STILL have not been able to resolve their VGA driver issues. So sad.
Anyway, so I will be investing in a decent nVidia VGA card in the near future.
I had exactly same issues with a Ryzen 7 5700g and b550m Aorus Elite, if you're using 3200mhz module ram sticks or below that, maybe that's the issue.
Well, I solved my problem by underclocking my vega 8 apu, here is what I did....
1. GFX clock frequency: 2000mhz -> 1570mhz
2. GFX core voltage: 1.1v
3. Precision Boost Overdrive(PBO): Auto-> Disable
4.CPU Clock ratio: 46.0->45.0
5.CPU Core voltage: 1.307v
6.Global C-State Control: Enable
Boom
Hi @MEGReborn Thank you for your reply and I appreciate your suggestions, however, I am extremely wary of doing any over- or under-clocking as I feel that the default settings are what the manufacturer (in this case AMD) feel are the most stable and provide the best performance. I know there are enthusiasts who disagree and do change settings, however, their systems are specced to the max and have really good cooling systems etc installed for maximum protection. I, being a pensioner of 62, simply cannot afford top-line components in order to experiment with over- and under-clocking, so I leave well enough alone.
Old saying applies: if it ain't broke, don't fix it.