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GTA V randomly crashing because of AMD DX drivers

Heyy Guys,

There already are multiple topics about some games crashing with AMD DirectX drivers, either in Crossfire or in Single-Mode, especially in the R9-Card-Range.

First my specs:

 

CPU: Intel Core i7-6700K at 4.1 GHz

GPU: Sapphire R9 Fury Tri-X (4GB)

STORAGE: 2 x SSD, one Samsung Evo 256 GB (new), the other OCZ Vertex 512 GB (old).

RAM: 4x4 GB Corsair "DOMINATOR DDR4"

MB: ASUS Z170-DELUXE

PSU: Cooler Master V650

CPU-COOLER: Cooler Master MasterLiquid 120

 

My temps are totally chilly, and I have got 5 case fans. My CPU is not very overclocked and runs stable all the time.

The TDP of the Fury is not much more than approx. 200 W ;).

 

The problem is the following:

I start GTA V. Everything is perfect.

Loading story mode.

It jumps to Franklin, and I play around for 2, 3 or even up to 10 Minutes.

Suddenly, the screen freezes for 2 secs and the all-mighty Windows UAC screams "Grand Theft Auto V has stopped working"

It is just crap.

The event viewer just shows:

Quote

Faulting application name: GTA5.exe, version: 1.0.350.1, time stamp: 0x5540c256
Faulting module name: GTA5.exe, version: 1.0.350.1, time stamp: 0x5540c256
Exception code: 0xc0000005
Fault offset: 0x00000000011cd2b8
Faulting process ID: 0x15d8
Faulting application start time: 0x01d3f0fc02a2855a
Faulting application path: D:\Games\Grand Theft Auto V\GTA5.exe
Faulting module path: D:\Games\Grand Theft Auto V\GTA5.exe
Report ID: 48496dbc-0642-4525-a188-47903f2ed3b9
Faulting package full name:
Faulting package-relative application ID:

And sometimes (the name of the thread is because of that):

Quote

Faulting application name: GTA5.exe, version: 1.0.350.1, time stamp: 0x5540c256
Faulting module name: atidxx64.dll, version: 22.19.162.4, time stamp: 0x58fe9d90
Exception code: 0xc0000005
Fault offset: 0x000000000009db0c
Faulting process ID: 0x1dd4
Faulting application start time: 0x01d3f0f69e0b7062
Faulting application path: D:\Games\Grand Theft Auto V\GTA5.exe
Faulting module path: C:\Windows\System32\DriverStore\FileRepository\c0313676.inf_amd64_96bbc33bec5c7fae\atidxx64.dll
Report ID: 68ec699e-5221-457d-a0d4-1736bde9715c
Faulting package full name:
Faulting package-relative application ID:

And here is what I tried to do:

  • Reinstalled graphics drivers (crimson)
  • Updated ~
  • Reinstalled Windows
  • Installed original graphics drivers from Sapphire (2015 lol #CATALYST)
  • Tried 8199235782 fixes that were available on the internet.

I AM SO SORRY TO BOTHER YOU WITH THIS BUT GTA V IS MY SECOND FAVORITE GAME.

And I am sorry to bother you with this shit, but be sure, I wouldn't be here if I didn't try out all the fixes out there.

Would you please, please help me?

:S

 

EDIT: The game is a legal copy of GTA V, it is the Social Club release.

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How do you know it's the drivers, it works fine here.

I'v got an r9 280x r9 290 and rx480, it works all fine with the latest drivers.

 

edit:

I mean, it could also be a corrutped hdd/ssd, drivers conflicting with another driver, windows being unstable.(unstable overclock?).

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Check the system logs. It will tell you exactly why it is crashing in relation to the system

The Workhorse (AMD-powered custom desktop)

CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 3700X | GPU: MSI X Trio GeForce RTX 2070S | RAM: XPG Spectrix D60G 32GB DDR4-3200 | Storage: 512GB XPG SX8200P + 2TB 7200RPM Seagate Barracuda Compute | OS: Microsoft Windows 10 Pro

 

The Portable Workstation (Apple MacBook Pro 16" 2021)

SoC: Apple M1 Max (8+2 core CPU w/ 32-core GPU) | RAM: 32GB unified LPDDR5 | Storage: 1TB PCIe Gen4 SSD | OS: macOS Monterey

 

The Communicator (Apple iPhone 13 Pro)

SoC: Apple A15 Bionic | RAM: 6GB LPDDR4X | Storage: 128GB internal w/ NVMe controller | Display: 6.1" 2532x1170 "Super Retina XDR" OLED with VRR at up to 120Hz | OS: iOS 15.1

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Thanks, but I think the OC is pretty stable.

And, the SSD works super fine. And, atidxx64.dll is the problem (Event Viewer).

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And, the atidxx64.dll is just a Direct X driver that appears to mess with many people.

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It is so sad... I think I've found the solution, at least somehow... Direct X 10.0 doesn't crash (at least not for 1 hr) - But I can't live without MSAA

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Just reset BIOS, reset GPU overclocks to off, see if that helps. If it still crashes then at least we know that your overclocks are not the problem, then you can just change the settings back.

Workstation:

Intel Core i7 6700K | AMD Radeon R9 390X | 16 GB RAM

Mobile Workstation:

MacBook Pro 15" (2017) | Intel Core i7 7820HQ | AMD Radeon Pro 560 | 16 GB RAM

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