Sims 4 randomly crashing
I have been playing sims 4 since it came out basically, I have played it mostly on an old pc desktop computer up until a few months ago where the computer was just running too slowly and so i started to use my boyfriend iMac. All was well on both of those computers, having just moved all of my mods and save files from one computer to the other.
i have now got a new gaming pc. i triple checked that the driver specs were good enough for sims, the hard drive has plenty of memory for sims and the graphics card it up to spec as well. I started a fresh with this new computer, not passing over any of my old saves or mods and it crashed as soon as i went into the gallery. and then crashed again around 10 minutes into being in build mode. it has crashes again and again without fail now. sometimes it crashes with a white screen, sometimes it just freezes and im able to close the window and sometimes it crashes my whole computer.
i have updated the drivers, i have "repaired" the game on origin. i have taken off all the newly downloaded cc and tried it with nothing on, ive opened the game in windowed mode, turned the graphic down.... literally everything i can think of to try and sort this. bare in mind i had no trouble playing on an old pc (albeit a little slow) and a mac before this when there was thousands of ccs on the game.
the computer is able to play other games via stream for hours on end so i have no idea why Sims 4 and my computer are having so many issues.
please help!!
@Sophiebubblesxx I apologize for the delay; I've been swamped the past couple days. Anyway, I've looked at your hwinfo log, and while most of the readings look fine, there's one that stood out: the voltage of the PCIe slot where your graphics card is connected to the motherboard.
A desktop graphics card is built to work with 12 V, and anything below 11.9 could be an issue, although it isn't always. However, as you can see, the voltage is consistently around 11.5 and drops even further towards the end of the log. Not only could this account for the crashes, it's highly likely that your card isn't responding well to this. If other voltages are as inconsistent, other components may be similarly affected.
This isn't definitive proof that the issue is your power supply—for one thing, the PSU's stats aren't in the log, perhaps because the unit doesn't have the proper sensors. So the issue could theoretically be elsewhere. Still, the PSU is a good place to start. If you can, borrow a unit from a friend or family member, at least for a couple days or so, at least long enough to test.
Your graphics card doesn't require that much power: a 350W PSU should be fine for testing. If you want to run hwinfo again with a new unit in place, feel free to upload a new log for me to read. If this power supply is as old as the processor, you may want to start to think about replacing it anyway, although it's still better to find out for sure whether a new PSU helps.