BSOD: In dire need of helping hands. :c

KuroShinigami

Reputable
Jun 19, 2015
10
0
4,510
Recently got the second bluescreen of that kind and am clueless to it's whereabouts.
I'm apparently too stupid to use Google as well, because the answers that I get are not helping me in any form.

BlueScreen occured twice when playing the game "Rust".
I just want to know how I can fix it.

Heres the .dmp : LINK

System:
Win 7
ASRock 870 Extreme 3 R2.0
FX 8350 ( 4ghz ) running on 1.175V
GTX 970
600W Psu
8gb 1333mhz RAM

I really need some help with this :s
I'd have infinite amounts of gratitude for whoever helps :s

This here might also be of use (?)
http://pokit.org/get/?98589983c93479bbb911d4de2562fa33.png
 

KuroShinigami

Reputable
Jun 19, 2015
10
0
4,510


I just did the memtest and it resulted "no issues found."
 

BigBadBeef

Admirable
Really? Now that's surprising. The next possibility that its failing is because of driver problems, but if there were driver problems, then it would say "DRIVER IRQL NOT LESS OR EQUAL".


"
The issue pops up on your screen, when a memory address triggers an unauthorized access. It could be either a kernel-mode process or a device driver that tries to access this memory address without prior permissions.

Any program refers to a part of memory by using a respective pointer. The pointer contains coded values that are pointing towards the memory location. However, if these values are corrupted or incorrect, they direct the application to an unapproved memory portion, thus causing an error. Such an occurrence in a user mode program results in an access violation, while that in a kernel mode produces Stop error 0x0000000A message with BSOD.

In Windows 8.1, the error could have sourced right from the time of upgrade from Windows 8 to 8.1, due to an incompatible backup tool, device driver, antivirus software, or system service.
"


Still, no harm in removing current drivers and installing the newest version.