m7mod

Distinguished
Hello,
So I've been having problems lately with my games, any game that is demanding is crashing, I've had this problem with R6S, DayZ, Overwatch, and Teardown.
And basically any demanding game, I've checked Ram usage, GPU and CPU temps and all seems fine.
Things I Tried:
Clean boot
Updating the drivers to the latest drivers
Running the games as administrator
running the games on my SSD instead of my HDD
SFC /scannow
tried reinstalling r6s and uplay
turning off steam/uplay overlay
stress testing the CPU/GPU (nothing happened no crashes)

I don't know what else to do. I'm leaving formating and doing a clean install of windows as last resort but if there isn't any other option I'll go with it because I'm honestly done.

Specs:
Intel Core i5-9400F
16 GB DDR4 2400mgz
Msi h310i pro
ASUS ROG RTX 2060 Super Strix
NZXT C650 PSU
CM Hyper 212 BE
NZXT Manta

Sysinfo and dxdiag >> https://www16.zippyshare.com/v/c6CNttpt/file.html

Thanks for your help.
 
Solution
Hi,

sounds like you've tried most things I could suggest - one thing you didn't list, have you tried doing a full driver re-install for the gpu? If now I recommend fully removing the old drivers using the Drive DDU tool, link:
https://www.guru3d.com/files-details/display-driver-uninstaller-download.html

Then install the latest drivers again (make sure to get them directly from the nVidia website, rather than from your graphics card manufacturer). That can often clear up random crashes / instability. If that doesn't help then I think a full re-install of Windows is worth trying, if both the CPU and GPU are stable for stress tests it sounds like it probably is a software issue (out of interest, have you checked memory stability as...
Hi,

sounds like you've tried most things I could suggest - one thing you didn't list, have you tried doing a full driver re-install for the gpu? If now I recommend fully removing the old drivers using the Drive DDU tool, link:
https://www.guru3d.com/files-details/display-driver-uninstaller-download.html

Then install the latest drivers again (make sure to get them directly from the nVidia website, rather than from your graphics card manufacturer). That can often clear up random crashes / instability. If that doesn't help then I think a full re-install of Windows is worth trying, if both the CPU and GPU are stable for stress tests it sounds like it probably is a software issue (out of interest, have you checked memory stability as well? that is the other thing that could be the culprit)
 
Solution