@3DiE9djua2 @EA_David I checked for updates on windows today and found it had not been updated in a couple months. I tried to update and found an error which was not allowing windows update or microsoft features to work. I decided it was probably a good time to just reinstall windows since I had been wanting to clean up everything on it anyways.
I went ahead and did a fresh install of windows 10 and deleting all my files as well. I didn't put any of my backup files back on because I wanted to test the game before to make sure nothing was tampering with it.
I also installed the lastest Nvidia drivers, as well as the newest Windows 10 patches. Reinstalled Heat and played for a solid 5 hours with no problems at all. I was shocked.
It was getting a little late and I told myself 1 more race before bed and in the first 10 seconds of that race; freeze, then crash to desktop.
I quickly switched to task manager to pull up the performance log and I snapped a picture. I wish I had actual done a datalog, but I have no programs on this laptop anymore.
I'm not sure what the correlation is, if anything; but I had just purchased and upgraded the Mitsubishi Evolution X. I haven't done any of the off road race story line yet, so I decided to build an off road car. I can't remember the name of the race, but it's technically the second time you meet her after obtaining that Grille for Lucas.
For the whole 5 hour session I was using an NA Mazda Miata doing all sorts of races, missions, police chases, both in day and night. This was all in Solo mode. I had no issues at all. I switched to the Evo and started a race with it to find not even 10 seconds in and it crashes. It could be coincidental, but it's seeming to me that certain cars are causing something to be off.
Looking at the crude datalog in task manager, I did notice that usage on everything was high across the board with nothing but the game and origin running. But the more interesting thing is that at the time of the crash my on board internal graphics spiked for some reason while my actual GTX 1060 completely dipped. That was about the time of the crash give or take a couple seconds. I also find it odd that my network adapter spiked in usage. Nothing should have been transferring at that time, so why the sudden surge when the game crashed? My HDD and CPU usage was high the whole time with a slight increase on both just as it crashed.
I guess this kind of just leaves me with more questions rather than answers, but hopefully it helps in some way.
As the previous posts asked, I did not run origin in offline mode since the game was working great. It's a little too late to go testing now, but I can try that the next time I'm on and see if that changes anything. I sort of have a feeling it won't do much though.