

How to fix Radeon drivers breaking your Windows install In this case, my high-profile headaches managed to help AMD probe the core issue, so I can provide troubleshooting steps that worked for me and happily report that a permanent fix is being investigated. Obviously, being the executive editor of PCWorld may fast-track me for a quick response (though again, AMD representatives are very responsive to driver feedback on social media). I tweeted about my woes and an AMD representative emailed me within minutes. It is a deeply frustrating experience, and one that would be disastrous for a standard PC gamer. Googling the issue surfaced this WCCFTech article from mid-February along with plenty of other coverage, citing numerous user reports of Adrenalin 23.2.1 destroying their Windows installs. Backup your data! #AMD #Driver - CapFrameX February 15, 2023 It turns out that checking that box, done in conjunction with a silent Windows update occurring in the background without my knowledge, probably led to my rig’s downfall.īe careful when you install the latest Adrenalin 23.2.1. Then I installed the driver, checking the box to perform a “factory reset” clean installation rather than an upgrade-in-place. I opened up Chrome, navigated to AMD’s website, and downloaded the WQHL-certified Adrenalin 23.2.2 drivers that the site recommended for a 7900 XT. I then used the fantastic DDU Uninstaller tool to ensure that Nvidia’s bits were truly and completely eradicated, and rebooted. I then used Windows 10’s Add and Remove Programs tool to uninstall all Nvidia software from my PC and rebooted. Then, I powered down the system and replaced the 4070 Ti with the Radeon RX 7900 XT. With it installed, I manually updated Windows 10. I already had a GeForce RTX 4070 Ti set up to give Nvidia’s awesome RTX Video Super Resolution a whirl.

This is a rig from AMD’s Radeon RX 7900-series reveal, not my test system.
