Your Game Requires A System Restart To Play Valorant Windows 10

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Fanny Lococo

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Jul 9, 2024, 9:29:27 PM7/9/24
to dergrlinnate

MiniTool OEM program enable partners like hardware / software vendors and relative technical service providers to embed MiniTool software with their own products to add value to their products or services and expand their market.

However, like any other game, Valorant is full of issues in Windows 11/10. For example, you can get the error code VAN 1067 or 9001, Valorant is not working without TPM, Valorant is not available on your operating system, and more.

your game requires a system restart to play valorant windows 10


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If you play Valorant on an old version of Windows, for Windows 8 or older, this game may not work normally. This is because this game is designed mainly for Windows 10 although it can run in some old Windows systems.

Riot Vanguard, a new anti-cheat system, is required to run Valorant. If the service is disabled due to some reason, you may receive the Valorant system restart loop. To fix it, enable this service by following the steps below.

To fix the Valorant error, you can choose to remove this game from your PC and then reinstall it in Windows 11/10. Just launch Control Panel, click Uninstall a program, and then uninstall this game. Then, install it again to see if the issue is fixed.

The 'Valorant requires system restart to play' error can show up persistently even if you reboot your system, and it can be quite frustrating. A lot of players run into the issue for a variety of reasons but the number one reason why you get the 'Valorant requires system restart to play error' is due to Riot Vanguard being disabled. If you manually turned off the Riot Vanguard anti-cheat, a quick restart should fix the issue. If you still get the 'Valorant requires system restart to play' error, then you will need to perform a few more checks, including an automatic game repair.

Riot Vanguard works optimally when you have the latest versions of Windows 10 installed. If your OS is not updated, consider updating to the latest version. Valorant works on Windows 7, Windows 8.1, and Windows 10. You can find the appropriate tools to update your OS from the official Microsoft support page here. However, the game is fully optimized for Windows 10 and if you are running an older version of Windows, you may run into issues like the 'Valorant requires system restart to play' error.

Brand new computer, I was only able to diagnose this because the game Valorant requires TPM 2.0 to play and it has so since last year. I'd been playing this game for a number of weeks and all of a sudden the other day it wouldn't let me play because TPM 2.0 was not detected. After calls with HP support and Windows support I'm still stuck. TPM is enabled in the BIOS but device manager does not show a security processor, "Security processor troubleshooting" notes that my device does not support this feature, tpm.msc notes "compatible TPM cannot be found". I would think TPM was working as I was able to play Valorant up until recently so not sure what happened. I've tried to "Reset PC" in full, tried to reimage with flash drive but can't because windows 11 install requires TPM which is not detected.

Oddly, and I think related, a week or two ago at every startup I was being asked for my Bitlocker key which was getting annoying. I disabled Bitlocker on the computer to avoid this and I had all the bitlocker settings that I could play with. Since the above issue, I've noticed there is no longer any Bitlocker settings on the computer, they have seemingly all disappeared.

One odd thing in the BIOS is that I've tried to clear the TPM keys and the note says that it will ask for confirmation via "Physical Presence" detection, I go to save BIOS settings but I don't get any prompts for confirmation, it just restarts. It also says that once TPM keys are cleared on next startup it will automatically change "Clear TPM Keys" to "No" but it doesn't do this after multiple startups. I'm not sure if the BIOS menu is showing that these changes are being made but maybe they aren't actually taking effect.

Anyways I'm at a loss, brand new computer, TPM and Secure Boot enabled in BIOS, but TPM is not detected by Windows. I would guess they were prior to a few days ago because Valorant was able to work before this.

4 - Changing the Clear TPM notes that "Physical Presence" check is required by BIOS, does not happen when you change this setting, just restarts after save. ALSO it says after they have been cleared on next setup it will revert back to No, it stays as yes until I manually change it back which makes me question if turning this to Yes is even doing anything...

Dilip_18 - Thank you for the comments but alas I don't think there is a path forward and HP is asking me to return the computer as the only solution, thus I will be taking my business elsewhere. On your specific points:

2. HP Omen BIOS does not show the appropriate advanced BIOS features to enable the CPU's - Regarding the BIOS I found a similar issue in the following thread. As this person's chip was not on the motherboard itself but on the CPU (as is mine we are assuming) they had to change BIOS setting of "TPM Device Selection" to one where the CPU would be seen for TPM. The Omen BIOS doesn't have any options like this, is this potentially an oversight in the BIOS that there aren't enough settings that can be adjusted to allow for a CPU TPM module? -us/windows/forum/all/tpm-20-enabled-but-not-showing-in-windows/8fc7...

Also at the following link it discusses enabling CPU's FTPM/PTT but notes the caveat that some motherboards may be lacking the BIOS setting to enable CPU's TPM. There are VERY limited TPM settings on the Omen BIOS related to TPM. If this were the case this is a big issue with new Omen computers and Windows 11 now requiring TPM. -to-check-windows-tpm-status-enable-cpu-amd-ftpm-intel-ptt/

If you find the Advanced settings tab missing in the BIOS, that is because the manufacturer has locked the settings on your computer as the improper use of the Advanced settings in BIOS could damage your computer. It is not available on this model.

Omen 45L uses a chip on the motherboard for the TPM controller. It's behind the video card and the MB says "BIOS" next to it. Datasheet: W25Q128JV - Serial NOR Flash - Code Storage Flash Memory - Winbond. Intel's TTP is disabled by default. As pointed out Omen's bios does not give the option to select the CPU TTP. Presumably this was to stop retail basic people from changing it and messing up the boot.

The TPM module most likely got corrupted. One thing to try is to set up a bios password as resetting the TPM may require that. Otherwise, you'll need to swap out the motherboard as reprogramming the TPM chip would also requiring flashing the bios and there are no bios files available from HP to do that.

I really appreciate the feedback. I did try the setting BIOS password just now with no luck, same day my box showed up from HP for a repair so I will be sending back to them to see if they can figure it out. I'm going to point them to your post as the HP support folks thought the 45L TPM was coming from the CPU.

I've been using iCue for years with no problems until now. I recently switched from intel to Ryzen and am now having issues with windows hanging and not responding. I have done a lot of troubleshooting trying to figure out what is causing this and I have come to the conclusion that it is, without a doubt, Corsair's iCue software causing this issue.

Here's what happens:

Randomly, iCue will crash, causing all the lights in my PC to go into "hardware mode." This is almost immediately followed by any apps I have running to stop responding and eventually the only thing I can do is move my mouse around the desktop. Clicking on icons does nothing. Attempting to restart the PC via start menu does not work and if left alone, Windows explorer will eventually crash and not recover. I have to do a hard reset to get everything working again. This happens at least once a day.

Things I have troubleshooted:

-Reinstalled windows several times
-DDU Drivers and reinstall
-Bios Update/Cmos resets
-Registry cleaning/Defrag hard drives
-unplug all non-essential USB devices
-uninstall/reinstall iCue
-Disable iCue and other non-essential apps, running PC with iCue installed but not running.

None of this worked as my PC would still hang and crash.

About a week ago, I uninstalled iCue completely and did not reinstall it and have not had a system hang or crash since. Uninstalling iCue seems to have fixed my issue.

This is a shame because I have over $300 in Corsair LL Series fans in my PC that I can no longer customize unless I want my system to crash daily.

Does anyone else have this issue and have you come to the same conclusion. I have seem similar posts on reddit and even in these forums going back several years and it seems the problem has not been fixed.

My Specs:

AMD Ryzen 7 5800x
ASUS ROG Strix B550-F Motherboard
32GB Corsair Vengeance RGB PRO 3600Mhz RAM
Nvidia RTX 3080Ti FE
1tb WD Black M.2 SSD
2x 1TB SSDs (RAID 0)
850w EVGA BQ 80+ Gold Power Supply

10x Corsair LL Series Fans
Corsair H150i Elite Capelix 360mm AIO
Corsair K70 TKL Keyboard
Corsair Dark Core pro Mouse
Corsair MM700 RGB Mousepad

It seems I am having the same issue hence I ended up finding your post. The only difference is that it completely freezes for 1 minute and I cannot move the mouse around. Until it reboots on it's own. One weird thing is that when I lock windows the RGB of the ram modules default to another color, and when I sign in the switch to obey i-cue settings.

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