recurring Unexpected_store_exception BSOD

Lucas de Oliveira 0 Reputation points
2025-02-14T00:13:44.4233333+00:00

I've been getting the unexpected_store_exception BSOD at least once a day for the past 3 days or so. Apart from one occasion, all of them happened while I was gaming

I checked my SSD and RAM health and apparently it's all fine.

I enabled windows to create minidumps, but i can't make sense of any of it. I've seen on other threads people posting them and getting answers, so i'll post the minidumps here

Thank you

Minidumps: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1jTD_jrNVptPa2hrrUdtk_LqgWpOLwWjX/view?usp=drive_link

Windows for business Windows Client for IT Pros User experience Other
0 comments No comments
{count} votes

1 answer

Sort by: Most helpful
  1. Anonymous
    2025-02-17T00:28:06.4933333+00:00

    Hello,

    Thank you for posting in Microsoft Q&A.

    Based on the description, I understand your question is related to BSOD.

    I understand that you would like to look at the full system memory dump, but understand that detailed analysis of the dump will require more professional resources and this may be beyond the range of this forum.

    The UNEXPECTED_STORE_EXCEPTION bug check has a value of 0x00000154. This bug check indicates that the kernel memory store component caught an unexpected exception.

    Check the System Log in Event Viewer for other error messages to help pinpoint the device or driver that's causing the error. To open Event Viewer, select the keyboard shortcut Win+R, enter eventvwr.msc and press the ENTER key. Look for critical errors in the system log that occurred in the same time frame as the blue screen.

    Select Start, enter "Windows Memory Diagnostics" in the Search box, and then press Enter. Choose whether to restart the computer and run the tool immediately or schedule the tool to run at the next restart. Windows Memory Diagnostics runs automatically after the computer restarts and performs a standard memory test automatically. To run the extended test, press F1 and use the Up and Down arrow keys to set the Test Mix to Extended. Press F10 to apply the desired settings and resume testing.

    Look in Device Manager to see if any devices are marked with the exclamation point (!). Review the events log displayed in the driver properties for any faulting driver. Try updating the related driver.

    Use the System File Checker tool to repair missing or corrupted system files. The System File Checker is a utility in Windows that allows users to scan for corruptions in Windows system files and restore corrupted files. Use the SFC /scannow command to run the System File Checker tool.

    Have a nice day.

    Best Regards,

    Molly

    ============================================

    If the Answer is helpful, please click "Accept Answer" and upvote it

    0 comments No comments

Your answer

Answers can be marked as Accepted Answers by the question author, which helps users to know the answer solved the author's problem.