My sims 4 game keeps crashing. the first time it crashed i got the BSOD. Upon restarting I restarted the game and about 10 mins in the game crashed again. Attached is the DxDiag can anyone help me ou...
@Kay4791 I've moved your post to the Sims 4 PC tech section.
The particular BlueScreens you're getting, or at least the ones listed in your dxdiag, are often related to a bad graphics driver, or to a problem with the graphics card. There are also a few errors that definitely point to the driver, although again the problem can be the card and not the driver itself. So you'll need to install a new GPU driver; if that doesn't help, you can clean uninstall and reinstall instead.
First though, it's a good idea to run a couple of basic checks on your Windows system files, since the other listed errors have to do with Windows itself. Here's how:
Hit Windows key-X
Choose either “PowerShell (Administrator)” or “Command prompt (Administrator),” whichever option is offered
Inside the window that appears, copy and paste “DISM.exe /Online /Cleanup-image /Restorehealth” without quotes into the window, and enter
The system will start validating soon. If it throws an error, please list it here
After it reaches 100%, hit Windows key-X again
Again, choose “PowerShell (Administrator)” or “Command prompt (Administrator)”
Inside the window, copy and paste “sfc /scannow” without quotes into the window, and enter
Post the message you receive here
If sfc reports it found corrupt files and was unable to repair some of them, stop here and let me know. Otherwise, restart your computer and manually run any pending Windows updates. Hit Windows key-i, select Update & Security, and click the button to check for updates.
You can get a new driver for your graphics card here:
Next, take your computer completely offline—disable wifi and/or pull the ethernet cord—and double-click the DDU.exe. Take note of where the file will land, and click Extract. If it's easier, you can copy the path and then paste it into the address bar in a File Explorer window. Open the folder and then launch Display Driver Uninstaller.exe, and you'll get a message that you're not in Safe Mode. Click OK, then go to Options and enable Safe Mode dialog. Here's a screenshot of what your options should look like; make sure the box in red is checked:
Close options, and the DDU, and then open the DDU.exe again. For launch options, choose "Safe Mode (Recommended)," and then click Reboot to Safe Mode (you'll need your password, so find it before rebooting). Once you login, you'll see this:
In the blue box, choose GPU, then AMD if it's not already showing. Then click Clean and Restart (red box).
Once your computer has rebooted, now back in normal mode, run the driver as an admin: right-click on the download and select "Run as administrator."
If the game still crashes after all this, please run another dxdiag and attach it to a reply.