Question BSODs, freezing and crashing in all games ?

Aug 21, 2024
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So i'm completely lost on what to do i've been having constant random bsods and freezing and crashes on every single game making all of them unplayable
specs
I5 9400
32 gb of ddr4 ram
gtx 1080 aero oc edition
cx 550 550 watt psu 80+ bronze rated
Motherboard is a TC-885 with the most newest bios update

everytime I do bsod it's a different error I have one of the dump files from earlier I ran through win dbg but got no info from it as idk how to read it
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1KX_JuFjGdP-HK0LHBLwunUQlAkUKKfhG/view?usp=drive_link

Things I have tried
Uninstalling all drivers and reinstalling them
Ran Memory Diag came back 0 errors
RAN SFC scan

New windows installation

New PSU
New SSD
 
Last edited:
Can you make the dump file public please (anyone with the link). Better still please download the SysnativeBSODCollectionApp and save it to the Desktop. Then run it and upload the resulting zip file to a cloud service with a link to it here. The SysnativeBSODCollectionApp collects all the troubleshooting data we're likely to need. It DOES NOT collect any personally identifying data. It's used by several highly respected Windows help forums (including this one). I'm a senior BSOD analyst on the Sysnative forum where this tool came from, so I know it to be safe.

You can of course look at what's in the zip file before you upload it, most of the files are txt files. Please don't change or delete anything though. If you want a description of what each file contains you'll find that here.
 
Can you make the dump file public please (anyone with the link). Better still please download the SysnativeBSODCollectionApp and save it to the Desktop. Then run it and upload the resulting zip file to a cloud service with a link to it here. The SysnativeBSODCollectionApp collects all the troubleshooting data we're likely to need. It DOES NOT collect any personally identifying data. It's used by several highly respected Windows help forums (including this one). I'm a senior BSOD analyst on the Sysnative forum where this tool came from, so I know it to be safe.

You can of course look at what's in the zip file before you upload it, most of the files are txt files. Please don't change or delete anything though. If you want a description of what each file contains you'll find that here.
Just made the memory dump downloadable to all and here is the bsod collection app aswell

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1BbmhgzmrBIpek0t81f-NzkCRCuoHF66U/view?usp=sharing
 
THere are two dumps in the upload, the first one is inconclusive but the second points squarely at the Intel Rapid STorage Technology driver iaStorAC.sys. This driver often causes BSODs, especially if it's out of date and your copy is well out of date, it predates Windows 11 that you're running....
Code:
4: kd> lmDvmiaStorAC
Browse full module list
start             end                 module name
fffff802`77820000 fffff802`783c5000   iaStorAC T (no symbols)           
    Loaded symbol image file: iaStorAC.sys
    Image path: \SystemRoot\System32\drivers\iaStorAC.sys
    Image name: iaStorAC.sys
    Browse all global symbols  functions  data  Symbol Reload
    Timestamp:        Mon Dec  3 23:21:08 2018 (5C059E44)
    CheckSum:         0011AD79
    ImageSize:        00BA5000
    Translations:     0000.04b0 0000.04e4 0409.04b0 0409.04e4
    Information from resource tables:
As you can see, it dates from December 2018!

You really don't need the Intel RST driver unless you run Optane memory of you're using a RAID array, but since you have it installed you should look for an update for this driver rather than uninstall it. The easiest way to do that is to download the Intel Driver and Support Assistant. Run that and install all drivers that it finds updates for.

If it continues to BSOD after that then run the Sysnative File Collection app again and upload the new output.