I will randomly have a crash which gives me a green screen on my main monitor followed by the PC rebooting. I have changed the Video Card PSU connectors which made it so it didn't happen at all last night while gaming and running my stream. Here is the specs:
I will be playing FF:XIV when all of a sudden I will get the green screen which causes my system to reboot. I got the error before and as I said I changed the PSU cables to the GPU and it didn't do the green screen for about 16 hours. I started the game today and I have gotten the error twich already.
Same as me, green screen halfway through league of legends games. Thanks to AMD's faulty drivers, I now have multiple strikes on my account for "leaving". I've DDU'd, I've upgrade my psu to 850w (80 gold), I've got the latest bios. I'm so tired of this GPU, why release a card that doesnt have drivers that actually work. Theres so many of us with this situation.
Got my new PC 3 days ago, its crashed 4x a day so far with just a green screen then reboot. Thought it was a faulty gpu until i found out this is a persistent issue with the card that wasn't included in any of the GPU reviews i watched for the 5700 XT
I am having this problem as well. The recent updates have helped, but I still get a green screen and crash about every other day.
gpu: MSI Radeon RX 5700 XT DirectX 12 RX 5700 XT MECH OC 8GB 256-Bit GDDR6 PCI Express 4.0 HDCP Ready CrossFireX Support Video Card
I'm really hoping there is another update soon that eliminates this issue. I was very excited to be able to play games with a powerful gpu, but this is kind of dashing those hopes. Should have spent my money on an NVIDIA card.
I purchased the Sapphire Nitro+ Radeon RX 5700 XT... It is only FFXIV that causes it to Green Screen freeze on me. Tried different HDMI / DP cables, tried different ports, reseating the GPU, theres no dust in the case, drivers are up to date, etc etc. It's frustrating that this is the only GPU I have owned that has ever done this to me.
Radeon software gives the message "Default Radeon Wattman settings have been restored due to an unexpected system failure".
Even Viewer is ridden with Warnings/Errors/Critical both leading up to and shortly after the restart.
My guess is that something either driver related, hardware related (We all use 5700XT) or software interferes with something, I just can't narrow it down any further on my own. I can play games fine (mostly). I can watch youtube/netflix etc fine. I can "force" the crash by playing and watching at the same time. (Guaranteed to happen within 30min-1hour).
Hello Guys!
I have the same problem as you, it happens since the beginning of this year.
My computer started to show a Black screen and randomly stop to work, I have bought a new monitor and the issue still exist and it's worst at this time, now my screen is Green and I can't work efficently for it. Please I really need help with it, nobody in my city could fix it. I will let some pictures about the hardware of my pc and how it seems when it becomes green. I can use youtube/Netflix, Sofwares like CS:GO that force it but it doesn't make it crush, it's just random.
n.
I am getting this same issue on my RX 570 Ryzen 5 2600 Build and have been trying to find a solution for about 6 months, i get solid colors not just green but usually is, then audio buzzes and then my PC crashes fully but my fans are still on but Keyboard and Display aren't.
same with 3600 xt gpu it restarts randomly even when im playing low performance games , but i think its the drivers that were uploaded incorrecly or AMD didn't check the new drivers when they realesed it
A LOT of users are complaining about this issue... AMD should do something about this. More now than ever! No fking stocks anywhere and if you ask me, I WILL NEVER BUY AMD GPUS AGAIN. Nvidia all the way
I created an account just to share this, as I, too, have been battling this exact issue with my 5700xt since I installed it just over a year ago. After my wife had constant and persistant crashes while playing Warzone, I decided to take a deep dive and try every fix I could think of. Flashed new bios, DDU + Clean install of gpu drivers, underclocked RAM to as low as 2133 and as high as 3200, to name a few. I tried every **bleep** thing.
I had manually adjusted the fans inside the radeon software for a very intense game, to ensure the card would stay cool. This manual adjustment was lost and it had reverted to automatic settings. Since then, it had reoccurred.
The fans weren't spinning up when needed. I adjusted the fans manually to a fairly high level and my computer is certainly noisier now, but it has not crashed at all since I did this. I'll keep you folks posted, but I strongly suggest giving it a try.
hello, I am having the same issue with my shappire RX 5700 XT, I do not think it is related to temperature.... sometimes, after a 3/4-hour game session I check MSI afterburner and temperatures are ok, generally below 70/75 C.... It must be a 5700XT's issue which is quite annoying.... just to let you know guys I just had this green screen/crash issue jtoday after getting an AMD update... before getting that it used to crash but without rebooting and green screen... strangely in my case it crashes with only one game (dirt rally 2) I am not sure why
The other fix I have went with and it has been stable for 30 + hours of gameplay now is, I underclocked my card to 1950MHZ and completely fixed all GPU sag that I had. One or the other may be the true fix, but both together have certainly resolved it, and I'm terrified to remove one.
To be honest, I've been trying to find this thread again. So thank you for the mention, as it made it much easier on me. It was stable for about 2 months. Issues re-occurred and I RMA'd. The new card exhibited similar symptoms that thus far have been fixed with a simple DDU and clean install (driver only) of the latest driver available. Having experienced both a bad card and seemingly one that had an issue with drivers (verified with event viewer and reliability history), I can say that there is a difference I noticed.
My suggestion would be: if your card is in the 2-5 seconds category, RMA it. If it is a faster crash, check event viewer and reliability history. If you find driver failures, DDU and clean install current drivers (driver only) and hopefully that works for you.
So I've had the same green screen issue, but only on one game, I have a gigabyte dsh3 B550m board with a ryzen 3600, 32gb of ddr4 ram but my card is a 6600xt so its not just the 5700 with this issue. What I found distrubing was when the green screen reset my pc I noticed my gpu fans where not working!!! Brand new card only a month old. I turn off my pc and now the fans work, this is either a AMD issue or a Unreal engine 4 issue becuase it gives me a UE4 error message very fast before it crashes, only game that has done this is UE4 game as well. DD simulator which isnt that graphically intense, so I dont know what to think about this issue. So if your pc crashes check your fans and make sure to reset your PC again if they arent working.
I Wish AMD Would Actually Take Notice Of This Instead Of Dogding, It's 2024 And I Am Having This Issue. I Am Not Able To Recommend AMD Hardware To My Fellow People If This Will Be The Case.. It's My First PC And This Is My Experience
A home theater PC (HTPC) or media center computer is a convergent device that combines some or all the capabilities of a personal computer with a software application that focuses on video, photo, audio playback, and sometimes video recording functionality. Since the mid-2000s, other types of consumer electronics, including game consoles and dedicated media devices, have crossed over to manage video and music content. The term "media center" also refers to specialized application software designed to run on standard personal computers.[1]
HTPC and other convergent devices integrate components of a home theater into a unit co-located with a home entertainment system. An HTPC system typically has a remote control and the software interface normally has a 10-foot (3 m) user interface design so that it can be comfortably viewed at typical television viewing distances. An HTPC can be purchased pre-configured with the required hardware and software needed to add video programming or music to the PC. Enthusiasts can also piece together a system out of discrete components as part of a software-based HTPC.[1][2][3][4][5]
Since 2007, digital media players and smart TV software has been incorporated into consumer electronics through software or hardware changes including video game consoles, Blu-ray players, networked media players, televisions, and set-top boxes. The increased availability of specialized devices, coupled with paid and free digital online content, now offers an alternative to multipurpose (and more costly) personal computers.[6]
The HTPC as a concept is the product of several technology innovations including high-powered home computers, digital media, and the shift from standard-resolution CRT to high-definition monitors, projectors, and large-screen televisions.
Integrating televisions and personal computers dates back to the late 1980s with tuner cards that could be added to Amiga computers via the Video Toaster. This adaptation would allow a small video window to appear on the screen with broadcast or cable content. Apple Computer also developed the Macintosh TV in late 1993 that included a tuner card built into a Macintosh LC 520 chassis but quickly withdrew from the market with only 10,000 units shipped.[7][8]
In 1996 Gateway 2000 unveiled the Destination computer, which included a tuner card and video card. The unit cost $4,000 and mostly integrated television viewing and computer functions on one color monitor.[7] The Destination was called a "PC-TV Combo" but by December the term "Home-theater PC" appeared in mainstream media: "The home theater PC will be a combination entertainment and information appliance."[9]
90f70e40cf