BSOD
Asus Laptop
Severity: CriticalWhat 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- Outdated or faulty graphics driver (especially common on ROG with NVIDIA GPUs)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
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.