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Kernel Error 141 Occurring every time a program or game is ran, crashing everything. PLEASE HELP

Sakura Wolf 0 Reputation points
2025-11-16T02:37:52.98+00:00

So everytime i run a game or anything of the sort, it crashes or stops responding. When I check my reliability history, it shows kernel error 141 every single time. I have updated bios, reinstalled windows, reseated my gpu and ram, i have deleted and reinstalled graphics drivers, ran sfc scannow, ran dism scans, ran windows memory diagnostics, and yet my issue continues, Every one of those tests I ran all said there was no issue as well, when there obviously still is one. Here is what the 141 error looks like.

Description

A problem with your hardware caused Windows to stop working correctly.

Problem signature

Problem Event Name: LiveKernelEvent

Code: 141

Parameter 1: ffffdd8b8bd36010

Parameter 2: fffff80478b80a10

Parameter 3: 0

Parameter 4: ffffdd8b5d8e40c0

OS version: 10_0_26200

Service Pack: 0_0

Product: 768_1

OS Version: 10.0.26200.2.0.0.768.101

Locale ID: 1033

Files that help describe the problem

WATCHDOG-20251115-1806.dmp

sysdata.xml

WERInternalMetadata.xml

memory.csv

sysinfo.txt

WERInternalRequest.xml

View a temporary copy of these files

Warning: If a virus or other security threat caused the problem, opening a copy of the files could harm your computer.

Please help me, I have had this going on for a long time now, and it is just getting worse by the day.

Windows for home | Windows 11 | Performance and system failures
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  1. Quinn.HP 8,955 Reputation points Independent Advisor
    2025-11-16T03:36:56.6833333+00:00

    Hello Sakura Wolf, I'm Quinn and here to help!

    I understand how frustrating this must be. Based on everything you’ve tried, this is more of a GPU issue. Have you tried undervolting or underclocking your GPU yet? If you can tell me your GPU model, I can give you the step-by-step guide to do it. For now, here’s a general starting point you can try:

    • Core clock: reduce by about 50–100 MHz
    • Memory clock: reduce by about 100–200 MHz

    You can use software like MSI Afterburner or your GPU’s own tuning tool, then test for stability.

    Was this answer helpful?


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