Good night. The cause of the problem turned out to be a new variant of the Virus Expiro of 32 bits but now for 64 bits. It was discovered by those of Eset Nod 32 a week ago. Unfortunately windows defender, malwarebytes or avast don't detect it yet. If someone has the same problem as me, try Nod 32. I hope they manage to fix your problem
Exception code: 0xc0000005 in video games
Faulting application name: EscapeFromTarkov.exe, version: 0.12.8.9888, time stamp: 0x5fa91549
Faulting module name: unknown, version: 0.0.0.0, time stamp: 0x00000000
Exception code: 0xc0000005
Fault offset: 0x0000000002268b74
Faulting process id: 0x590
Faulting application start time: 0x01d94398c3949d71
Faulting application path: C:\Scape form Tarkov\Client.0.12.8.9888\EscapeFromTarkov.exe
Faulting module path: unknown
Report Id: a8016356-6f7f-498e-ac90-83cbf373594d
Faulting package full name:
That is just one example, it really happens to me with almost all the games on my pc.
Things I've tried:
I tested the ram with memtest86 for 10h and 0 errors
Check hard drives, gpu, ram and cpu temperatures and all good
Update video card drivers
The power supply is new and gives enough power
I tried with sfc /scannow and all good
defrag the hdd and optimize the ssd
I have updated bios and I don't have overclock
I did performance and stress tests on the cpu and gpu and everything was fine
Examine the pc for viruses
Repair windows registry
Change ram modules. I even tried the GPU on and the ram on a friend's pc and all good
My computer is:
Motherboard: B85-DS3H Bios F3
Processor: Intel Core I5 4570 3.20GHZ
Four ram modules:
2 Kingston 4gb 1600MHZ
Team Group 4gb 1600Mhz
A-Data 4gb 1600Mhz
Hard drives:
SSD Kingston SV300 120GB
Seagate ST2000DM009 2Tb
GPU: AMD Radeon RX 580 8GB XFX GTS XXX Edition
Thank you very much in advance I hope I can fix my problem
Windows for home | Windows 11 | Gaming
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12 answers
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Anonymous
2023-02-22T07:41:00+00:00 -
Anonymous
2023-02-20T01:47:56+00:00 Thanks again for your response. I had already tried that but the same thing happens. I even tried different ram configurations. Like the two kingstons separately. And how many combinations occurred to me. I even tried them 1 by one in each module of the motherboard. Today, talking to two close friends, I discovered that the same thing has been happening to them for a few days. When we copy through external hard drives several things. Could it be a virus? It's the only thing that comes to my mind right now. Just for the fact that it started happening to all 3 of us after this. Windows Defender does not detect any for me, neither through a full scan nor an offline scanner. What other antivirus do you suggest I use? What I don't have the possibility of paying for the license. Any free?
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Anonymous
2023-02-20T01:25:40+00:00 Hi
Thanks for your reply.
I reviewed the detailed data you released and found that your memory uses multiple different brands of memory. Different brands of memory may cause various crashes under high load operation due to different timing and voltage.
You can try to insert only 2 Kingston memory modules on A1 B1 (positions 1 and 3, or 2 and 4) to check whether the blue screen problem disappears.
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Anonymous
2023-02-19T13:37:07+00:00 Good morning. Thank you very much for your reply. Unfortunately nothing he says could fix the problem. Windows had already reinstalled it before. The registry key that you mention does not appear to me, only the Default with the value at 0 and the command uses it, I installed directplay but everything remains the same.
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Anonymous
2023-02-19T05:15:45+00:00 Hi
Welcome to Microsoft community.
I'm glad to help you.
Judging by your description, it seems that your problem only occurs in the course of the game.
You've tried most of the solutions and it still doesn't work. I have a few more suggestions here that you can try.
- Modify the registry and use commands to repair the system.
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- Press Win+R and type regedit and press enter to open the Registry Editor to the next step.
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- Find the location of HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\ShellExecuteHooks in the Registry Editor interface, and then delete the {AEB6717E-7E19-11d0-97EE-00C04FD91972} on the right side to enter the next step.
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- Reopen the running window, type the cmd to open the command prompt window, and proceed next step.
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- Enter the following command in command prompt window and press enter.
for %i in (%windir%\system32\*.dll) do regsvr32.exe /s %i
Disclaimer: Generally, modifying registry subkeys or work group is intended for advanced users, administrators, and IT Professionals. It can help fix some problems, however, serious problems might occur if you modify the registry incorrectly. Therefore, make sure that you follow these steps carefully. For further protection, back up the registry before you modify it. Then, you can restore the registry if a problem occurs. For more information about how to back up and restore the registry, click here to view the article. **** https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/topic/how-to-back-up-and-restore-the-registry-in-windows-855140ad-e318-2a13-2829-d428a2ab0692
- Overwrite the installation with a Windows image. This process does not affect your data and files, it is a process of system components and settings replacement.
If anything is unclear, please do not hesitate to let me know.
Best regards
Derrick Qian | Microsoft Community Support Specialist