[SOLVED] BSoDs after 2 mins of gaming!

Rayquaza

Reputable
Mar 25, 2016
28
0
4,540
Hello, it's really frustrating for me that I run into BSoD just after 2-3mins of gaming. It occured 2 months ago, and it was fixed by a technician. Now it's happening again. My issues are:
  1. BSoD after 2-3mins of gaming
  2. Random game CTDs (if not BSoD), and BSoD if I play again.
  3. Random PC reboots.
  4. BSoD just after reboot.
  5. Display dosent show up after BSoD (The beep is heard during restart, I have to wait for 2 mins for display to come up, and I face any of the above problems)
  6. Disk error messages during startup.

My Rig:
i5 6600k (No OC)
Asus z170 pro gaming
RTX 2700super (No OC)
G.Skill rip jaws V (8gbx2)
Kingston SSD (Boot and Witcher 3)
WD blue HDD (for files and other games)
Corsair 650W PSU

It all (above symptoms) started 2 months ago when I connected my rig to my new TV , after which I took it to a technician and he fixed it. After I came back home after 2 months (it was untouched until I return home) a few days ago it started again while gaming.
There are multiple blue screens like kmode ..., Kernel....., Memory....., Security....., .... Etc.,.

I have not OCed anything recently, and when I had OCed, I never had any issue. My temps are all fine CPU <60c GPU < 80c .
I tried many things what websites and YouTube told like: Disabling some Startup processes, reset BIOS, update drivers.etc.,.
No issues with sfc /scannow command too.
Please help me guys!
 
Solution
1. Try running memtest86 on each of your ram sticks, one stick at a time, up to 4 passes. Only error count you want is 0, any higher could be cause of the BSOD. Remove/replace ram sticks with errors.

2. Can you follow option one on the following link - here - and then do this step below: Small memory dumps - Have Windows Create a Small Memory Dump (Minidump) on BSOD - that creates a file in c windows/minidump after the next BSOD

copy that file to documents

upload the copy from documents to a file sharing web site, and share the link in your thread so we can help fix the problem
1. Try running memtest86 on each of your ram sticks, one stick at a time, up to 4 passes. Only error count you want is 0, any higher could be cause of the BSOD. Remove/replace ram sticks with errors.

2. Can you follow option one on the following link - here - and then do this step below: Small memory dumps - Have Windows Create a Small Memory Dump (Minidump) on BSOD - that creates a file in c windows/minidump after the next BSOD

copy that file to documents

upload the copy from documents to a file sharing web site, and share the link in your thread so we can help fix the problem
 
Solution