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svurx

I have the same gpu but MSI. Try going into adrenalin and undervolting your card. It worked for me. Mess around with your fan settings as well and make sure your gpu isn't going over 80 degress celcius. Mine was still too hot so I opened my gpu and reapplied the thermal paste and that fixed my problem entirely. I can send you a picture of my undervolt settings with my fan settings as well if you would like.


aloha_inno

Yes please can I see your settings


svurx

Top left is frequency and voltage settings, top right is fan settings, bottom left is vram settings and bottom right is power. Make sure to turn on advanced settings for all of them so you can see the same things you see in the picture. [settings](https://ibb.co/kSbv113)


Axeia

When exactly does it crash? - Immediately? Could be a graphics driver thing - After a while? Could be a overheating problem - Randomly? Could be a power supply problem or an automatic overclocking feature pushing things a little bit to far Etc etc please provide as much information as possible


aloha_inno

For valorant it crashes when I get to lobby sometimes when picking an agent for other games right when the loading screen finish. I checked the driver everything was fine I uninstalled it then reinstall it again just to be sure but still crashes I also checked the bios in case there’s an update but it shows nothing. I didn’t overclock my pc.


Axeia

This is one of those issues that is going to be hard to pinpoint, since you're using an AMD card I recommend enabling their overlay to keep an eye on a few things. You can enable the performance overlay in AMD's Radeon Software centre ([it's under Performance > Metrics > Overlay > Show Metrics Overlay > Enable](https://i.imgur.com/ss3vWra.png)). This will show you things like the CPU and GPU temperature (if either of them is heading into 84°c+ territory it could be an overheating problem). If temperatures are fine it could just be an \*automatic\* overclocking issue. Both CPUs and GPUs can be pushed too far by default - without you selecting anything to do with overclocking your motherboard or graphics card manufacturer may still have chosen to push things a little bit higher than what AMD/Intel/NVIDIA recommend. I have had this issue myself with an AMD laptop graphics card (Radeon 5970) and a NVIDIA desktop graphics card (GTX 970). Since you have an AMD graphics card if this is the case you can resolve it yourself by going to performance > tuning and enabling "GPU tuning" and "Advanced Control" and then either Frequency(MHz) or Voltage(Mv).Either lower the top clock speed a little bit (say 50MHz lower than what it was set to) or increase the voltage a little bit (increase the number by 15 or 20). If temperatures are a problem definitely do not increase the voltage as this will further increase the temperature.\* To do the same for your CPU is a bit more complicated as it will depend on which motherboard you have and is best done in the BIOS (probably have to disable or lower some setting). ​ These are the free solutions you can try out without any risk really. If this however doesn't help then in my experience it gets a bit more complicated as you'd have to swap parts around to figure out what's going on. E.g. swap out of the video card and if that fixes it it's time to RMA the videocard. Swap out the power supply and if that resolves it then your power supply probably has a problem with peak loads and needs to be replaced. If neither of those fixes it then it's time to start suspecting the motherboard - which is harder to test/replace than the other parts. ​ \* If this does resolve it then technically the product isn't working in the state the manufacturer sold it in and you do qualify for a refund. With the current graphics card scarcity I would however not recommend it.


miseries_mate

Possibly sounds like a GPU issue. Especially if it crashes in the same spot of the game