

Hopefully nVidia is working feverishly on resolving the issue. There are numerous posts about this issue all over the Internet, with no identified work-around or solution. With Windows 7 you may get a blue screen error, or an error about "nVidia kernel display driver has stopped responding". Replacing hardware (with same graphics card series) will have no impact. Updating / rolling back drivers will have no impact. Fresh reinstall of the OS will have no impact. These crashes seem to be prevalent in modern versions of their cards - especially 200 series.

Anyone knows why this happens or any possible way to fix it My PC Windows Vista 64-Bit 4 GB System Ram. Now not the worst situation, but it's really pretty annoying. It runs fine, then slows for a couple of seconds, then runs fine again. the monitor almost appears to go into standby mode. Random FPS Drops - posted in Fallout 3 Technical Support: So playing Fallout 3 again, and I get these random FPS drops every so often while walking around.


In most cases, the hard lock will be accompanied by a loss of video signal - i.e. Then with no warning there will be a hard lock-up of system requiring reboot. In 3D applications, computer will run perfectly fine for a random period of time - from several minutes to several hours - including running benchmarking software, etc. Find and open (backup first) the fallout.ini file in 'My Documents\My Games\Fallout3'. When running standard 2D applications, the computer runs perfectly stable. USE THIS FIX ONLY IF YOU HAVE THE FOLLOWING SYSTEM SPECIFICATIONS: Windows 7. Here are likely symptoms: First, crashes only occur when running 3D applications or games. I mod manually and only "use" one manager, FOMM, merely to activate or deactivate each mod because the original game launcher's mod/file options window was only ever big enough for half a dozen mods/addons and I have 50 or 60.It seems that nVidia is having troubles with its drivers for Windows 7 - even final retail version. Required viewing for both getting the game to run smoothly (in both Windows 7 and 10), and modding it. He does tend to push "Mod Organizer" but also gives very detailed instructions for both manual tweaks and manual modding and assumes the viewer is a total newbie. You absolutely must remove all and any previous FO3/FNV files (note some are hard to find in your user apps folder area normally hidden by Windows).Ģ) Search the web for "fallout 3 gamerpoets" and follow his fantastic series of instruction videos. But what I can say is two things:ġ) The GOG version is rather different from steam or dvd and comes preconfigured with various fixes and tweaks. I have read there can be issues using intel integrated graphics - no personal experience of that. I have both FO3 and FNV running smooth as silk in Windows 7, both with many mods, and the TTW conversion, and having used a radeon r7-250, gtx750 and now gtx1050ti.
