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BSOD

Asus Laptop

Severity: Critical

What Does This Error Mean?

A BSOD on an Asus laptop indicates a critical Windows error. The stop code shown points to the cause — most often a graphics driver issue on ROG models, or a chipset/storage driver issue on others.

Affected Models

  • Asus ROG
  • Asus TUF Gaming
  • Asus VivoBook
  • Asus ZenBook
  • Asus ExpertBook
  • Asus ProArt

Common Causes

  • Outdated or faulty graphics driver (especially common on ROG with NVIDIA GPUs)
  • Windows update introducing a driver incompatibility
  • Failing RAM or storage producing memory or read errors
  • Overheating CPU or GPU triggering protective shutdown
  • Corrupted system files

How to Fix It

  1. Note the stop code on the BSOD.

    Common Asus BSODs include DPC_WATCHDOG_VIOLATION, IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL, and SYSTEM_THREAD_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED. The stop code and any driver name shown point directly at the cause.

  2. Boot into Safe Mode.

    Hold Shift and click Restart, then go to Troubleshoot > Advanced > Startup Settings, then press 4 for Safe Mode. If the system runs in Safe Mode, the BSOD is caused by a driver or third-party service.

  3. Update graphics and chipset drivers.

    Open MyAsus app or visit the Asus support page for your model. Download the latest GPU and chipset drivers — older drivers are the leading BSOD cause on ROG and gaming models.

  4. Run MyAsus diagnostics.

    Open MyAsus app and use the System Diagnostics tool. This runs hardware tests on RAM, storage, battery, and other components — identifying any failing hardware that could cause repeated BSODs.

When to Call a Professional

Repeated BSODs with the same stop code suggest a specific hardware fault. A technician can analyse minidump files to identify the root cause if you cannot resolve it from the stop code alone.

Frequently Asked Questions