shirobya It does help, because this is a common issue on newer HP gaming laptops but can happen in other contexts, so I didn't want to assume this was the usual HP problem. Here are a few workarounds:
None of these works for everyone, but something almost always does, so keep trying the workarounds until you find one that lets you play.
Your dxdiag does list a number of crashes of the graphics driver as well, or rather one of them. Sometimes these happen in the context of the known HP laptop issue, but if nothing above helps, you might also have a problem with one of the drivers. So the next step would be to do a clean uninstall and reinstall of both drivers, as described here:
https://crinrict.com/blog/2019/02/clean-re-install-of-graphics-drivers-with-display-driver-uninstaller-ddu.html
Start with the drivers HP provides for your laptop; you can update the Nvidia driver later if necessary, but it's best to test first with the one from HP. Go here:
https://support.hp.com/us-en/drivers/laptops
Enter your serial number, choose your OS (just Windows 11 is fine) if prompted, click All Drivers, expand Driver-Graphics, and download the newest Intel and Nvidia drivers by version number. The first number matters most, e.g. 32 is newer than 31; after that, the last four numbers matter.
The proper order of operations is uninstall the Nvidia driver > uninstall the Intel driver > restart > reinstall the Intel driver > restart > reinstall the Nvidia driver > restart, all while your computer is offline.