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Warzone crashes when i launch it

xUdumbx

Basically when i launch warzone it runs for 30 seconds then crashes and i have followed every single step ive found and none of them has worked

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8 hours ago, Alexxxdiffrent said:

wich gapichs card do  you have

 

gtx 1660 super

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My specs are:
OS: Windows 10

CPU: Ryzen 5 2600

RAM: Viper 2x8GB

MOBA: Gigabyte B450M DS3H-CF
GPU: GTX 1660 Super (MSI)

 

Warzone keeps crashing on launch for me every time I launch it about 30 seconds in and I can't figure out how to fix it.

 

I already tried verifying game files, reinstalling the game, reinstalling windows, turning Hardware-accelerated GPU scheduling on and off, excluding all game files in windows defender, disabling vsync, "Win+R -> type 'msconfig' -> go to 'Services' tab -> click 'Hide all microsoft services' -> either "disable all" and work your way till you find it OR disable known services that conflict with the anti-cheat" and whatever that is.

So far nothing has worked and the game still crashes the same way.

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see new thread/post, better wording and more info

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9 hours ago, xUdumbx said:

see new thread/post, better wording and more info

Merged. We don't allow posting same thread multiple times.

^^^^ That's my post ^^^^
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1st thoughts temperatures - launch the game with Afterburner and check CPU and GPU temps. Anything above 70°C means there is something wrong with your config. Can be poor airflow, dust buildup, dead fan, thermal paste worsent performance, water block clogged up with junk if you're using AIO or other form of LC. Running for some time and then crashing usually indicates some increasing over time problem and thermal problems are exactly that.

2nd thoughts - RAM. What is your ram speed? Do you have XMP enabled. Usually a crash by XMP should be triggered right at launch but sometimes the systems just like to play jokes on us.

3rd and last thoughts - what PSU do you have? It is possible if it is some cheap chinese knock-off to not be able to keep up with the demand or even causing itself overheating and dropping performance/crashing. Also check if its fan is working as well. It's very rarely now days that i have to deal with overheating and dead fan PSUs, but they are out there; once or twice a year it happens in my line of work. Sometimes even to reputable brands like Corsair and Cooler Master at their low tier PSUs.

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4 hours ago, QuantumSingularity said:

1st thoughts temperatures - launch the game with Afterburner and check CPU and GPU temps. Anything above 70°C means there is something wrong with your config. Can be poor airflow, dust buildup, dead fan, thermal paste worsent performance, water block clogged up with junk if you're using AIO or other form of LC. Running for some time and then crashing usually indicates some increasing over time problem and thermal problems are exactly that.

2nd thoughts - RAM. What is your ram speed? Do you have XMP enabled. Usually a crash by XMP should be triggered right at launch but sometimes the systems just like to play jokes on us.

3rd and last thoughts - what PSU do you have? It is possible if it is some cheap chinese knock-off to not be able to keep up with the demand or even causing itself overheating and dropping performance/crashing. Also check if its fan is working as well. It's very rarely now days that i have to deal with overheating and dead fan PSUs, but they are out there; once or twice a year it happens in my line of work. Sometimes even to reputable brands like Corsair and Cooler Master at their low tier PSUs.

My CPU temp reached a maximum of 63 and GPU reached a max of 51 Celsius when I launched the game before it crashed again.

Before I had XMP disabled in BIOS and now I put in on Profile 1 (only other option there was) and it had no effect. I don't really know what it is so I might have missed what you were trying to say or didn't do it correctly. By CPU-Z info my RAM is DDR4 and its DRAM frequency is 1496Mhz (should be correct since the official is 3000, afaik it just says half of it for reasons, should be this model: Patriot Viper Steel PVS416G300C6K DDR4 16 GB) 
My PSU shouldn't be the problem since its the Cooler Master Elite V3 600 and its fan seems to be working.

 

Can't figure out why its crashing, all other games work exactly as they should.

If there is any other info I should provide lmk

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did it work before , or did it just always crash?

 

also otherwise the only thing that sticks out is the psu, maybe you could try another one to exclude that  possibility.

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I don't remember the specific page (from reddit) but I'm running a RTX 2070 EVGA FTW3 Ultra+ super with a beefy overclock right out of the gates (I'm at like 1800 to 1900 mhz overclocked gpu). Activision published games unfortunately are sometimes very sensitive with overclocking GPU's... AKA will crash back to desktop or just freeze with an aggressive overclock. So for me I have to actually underclock my GPU by like 100 to 120 mhz and the game then runs pretty much flawless. Reduce the boost clocks overkill settings a tad and see if it helps. 

And if your worried about reducing the frequency of the GPU NOT TO FEAR!!!  the chance of causing any harm is like so small its like using a can of compressed air to dust a PC. 

I'm not a PC specialist I've just had a lot of time I've spent testing parts on PC's and playing activision games. And this is what I've found when using GPU's that specifically mention "super" in their name. That their native boost clocks sometimes are messy with game coding. 

Edited by NekoBubbles
I wanted to add one more little detail

I love PC building and gaming. 
REMEMBER botttlenecks can happen at all points of a PC part. Make sure you are at equilibrium. For all parts unless you intend to upgrade at a later point. Also QA Tested AAA Games.

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On 4/26/2021 at 11:38 PM, Mark Kaine said:

did it work before , or did it just always crash?

 

also otherwise the only thing that sticks out is the psu, maybe you could try another one to exclude that  possibility.

Yes it did work before but ever since it started to crash it started to crash earlier

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On 4/27/2021 at 4:58 PM, NekoBubbles said:

I don't remember the specific page (from reddit) but I'm running a RTX 2070 EVGA FTW3 Ultra+ super with a beefy overclock right out of the gates (I'm at like 1800 to 1900 mhz overclocked gpu). Activision published games unfortunately are sometimes very sensitive with overclocking GPU's... AKA will crash back to desktop or just freeze with an aggressive overclock. So for me I have to actually underclock my GPU by like 100 to 120 mhz and the game then runs pretty much flawless. Reduce the boost clocks overkill settings a tad and see if it helps. 

And if your worried about reducing the frequency of the GPU NOT TO FEAR!!!  the chance of causing any harm is like so small its like using a can of compressed air to dust a PC. 

I'm not a PC specialist I've just had a lot of time I've spent testing parts on PC's and playing activision games. And this is what I've found when using GPU's that specifically mention "super" in their name. That their native boost clocks sometimes are messy with game coding. 

So i just underglock it then?. Because recently i did an windows reset so i havent overglocked my GPU yet.

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31 minutes ago, xUdumbx said:

So i just underglock it then?. Because recently i did an windows reset so i havent overglocked my GPU yet.

Yeah underclock it by  -100 take a hit of the super high FPS peaking which should also level out the FPS's to be a bit more even and not ranomly peaking out of control. 

I love PC building and gaming. 
REMEMBER botttlenecks can happen at all points of a PC part. Make sure you are at equilibrium. For all parts unless you intend to upgrade at a later point. Also QA Tested AAA Games.

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Just now, NekoBubbles said:

Yeah underclock it by  -100 take a hit of the super high FPS peaking which should also level out the FPS's to be a bit more even and not ranomly peaking out of control. 

And by peaking with FPS sometimes FPS's will try to compensate for boost clocking by trying to push software harder than it likes. With Activision games this sometimes creates instability. Which is solved by just letting the clock speed down a tad. So instead of constant 60 to 70 FPS with the FPS counter it should stick to a more steady 60 to 64 FPS. 

I love PC building and gaming. 
REMEMBER botttlenecks can happen at all points of a PC part. Make sure you are at equilibrium. For all parts unless you intend to upgrade at a later point. Also QA Tested AAA Games.

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21 hours ago, NekoBubbles said:

And by peaking with FPS sometimes FPS's will try to compensate for boost clocking by trying to push software harder than it likes. With Activision games this sometimes creates instability. Which is solved by just letting the clock speed down a tad. So instead of constant 60 to 70 FPS with the FPS counter it should stick to a more steady 60 to 64 FPS. 

It gave me an extra 20 seconds until it did crashed. Btw i only underclocked Core MHz so should i underclock memory aswell or not

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