
VIDEO_TDR_FAILURE safe checklist
Understand VIDEO_TDR_FAILURE blue screens with GPU driver, heat, display cable, overclock, and hardware stop checks.

Guided repair
VIDEO_TDR_FAILURE safe checklist
This quick guided repair turns the video_tdr_failure safe checklist roadmap card into a practical checklist with safe first steps, yes/no decisions, and clear stop points.
Time needed
10-25 minutes
Difficulty
Beginner
Risk level
Medium
Applies to
Symptoms
- Blue screen shows VIDEO_TDR_FAILURE.
- Screen freezes, goes black, then restarts.
- Crashes happen in games, video playback, or GPU-heavy apps.
- The issue began after a GPU driver update, game update, or heat event.
Common causes
- GPU driver instability.
- Overheating GPU or poor airflow.
- Unstable overclock or undervolt.
- Damaged display driver install.
- GPU hardware or power problem.
Before you start
Prepare a safe repair session
- Write down the exact stop code and file name if shown.
- Return GPU tuning to default if you changed it.
- Do not install random driver tools.
- Stop for artifacts, shutdowns, or extreme heat.
Quick path
Try the safest checks first
Step 1
Confirm the exact symptom
The safest fix depends on when the problem appears and what changed right before it.
Exact path to follow
- 1Write down the exact message, code, sound, light, or behavior.
- 2Note whether it happens at startup, under load, while charging, after sleep, or after an update.
- 3Undo only one clear recent change if it is safe.
- 4Keep the note open while testing.
Expected result
You know the trigger and can avoid random fixes.
If it worked
If a simple undo fixed it, stop here.
If it did not work
Continue with the safe first checks.
Did a recent safe change clearly cause the problem?
Yes
Undo that change, test once, then stop if stable.
No
Move to the first-check path.
Step 2
Run the safe first checks
Simple settings, cable, pairing, storage, update, or heat checks solve many problems without risky repair.
Exact path to follow
- 1Check GPU temperature and fans.
- 2Disable overlays for one test.
- 3Use official GPU driver rollback or clean install paths.
- 4Test one game or workload at default settings.
- 5Check power and hardware clues if crashes continue at idle.
Expected result
Easy causes are ruled in or out before deeper steps.
If it worked
Stop and write down the check that fixed it.
If it did not work
Move to a more specific step based on the clue.
Did one safe check fix the symptom?
Yes
Stop here. Do not keep changing settings.
No
Continue to the detailed path.
Did the quick path fix the problem?
Yes
Stop here and write down what worked.
No
Continue with the detailed steps below.
Detailed steps
Move one step at a time
Step 3
Use the most likely clue
A focused clue is safer than trying every fix from a search result.
Exact path to follow
- 1Compare the symptom to the common causes list.
- 2Choose the cause that best matches the timing.
- 3Apply only the matching built-in, cable, driver, settings, or support step.
- 4Restart or reconnect only when the step calls for it.
Expected result
The repair path follows evidence instead of guesses.
If it worked
Keep the stable setup and stop.
If it did not work
Use official or model-specific support before deeper repair.
Did the clue point to a specific setting, cable, driver, or accessory?
Yes
Fix that item and test once.
No
Do not guess. Continue to official support or a related guide.
Step 4
Use official or built-in repair paths
Device-specific drivers, firmware notes, account recovery, and setup warnings should come from trusted paths.
Exact path to follow
- 1Use the code as a clue, then choose the safest matching NexyFix guide or official support path.
- 2Match the exact PC, laptop, phone, board, accessory, or Windows version.
- 3Avoid third-party tools that promise automatic repair.
- 4Test after one official or built-in change.
Expected result
You avoid sketchy tools and keep the change traceable.
If it worked
Save the support page or setting that helped.
If it did not work
Stop if the next step risks data, hardware, firmware, or account access.
Advanced checks
Use only after the safe path
Step 5
Decide whether this is no longer a beginner fix
Some symptoms point to hardware risk, data loss, account lockout, firmware risk, or repair work that needs tools.
Exact path to follow
- 1Read the stop list below.
- 2If any stop item matches, pause testing.
- 3Collect notes, photos, error codes, and model information.
- 4Ask a technician, official support, or an experienced repair person before continuing.
Expected result
You avoid turning a fixable problem into a bigger one.
If it worked
Use your notes to explain the issue clearly.
If it did not work
Do not repeat risky tests.
Does any stop item match your device?
Yes
Stop and ask for qualified help.
No
Use the related guides below for a narrower path.
Stop here
Stop points for video_tdr_failure safe checklist
System repair is safest when the exact message guides the next step.
- Stop if the PC shuts down, artifacts, or smells hot.
- Stop before overclocking, voltage tweaks, or registry TDR hacks.
- Stop if the GPU is not detected consistently.
Mistakes to avoid
- Do not stack several fixes at once.
- Do not use unknown repair, driver, cleaner, optimizer, or booster tools.
- Do not skip backup warnings when storage, reset, reinstall, firmware, or account steps are involved.
- Do not run commands you do not understand.
- Do not reset or reinstall before backup and account checks.
When to ask a technician
- The code appears with missing storage or repeated boot loops.
- A driver or firmware update caused repeated crashes.
- The next step risks data loss and there is no verified backup.
Guided repair FAQ
Should I change TDR registry values?
No. Registry TDR tweaks can hide the symptom without fixing the driver, heat, power, or hardware cause.
Is VIDEO_TDR_FAILURE always a dead GPU?
No. Driver timing, heat, overlays, unstable tuning, and power issues can also trigger it. Treat it as a graphics stability clue.
Is video_tdr_failure safe checklist always caused by one thing?
No. In the Error Codes / Tools area, the same symptom can come from settings, recent changes, cables, drivers, heat, storage, firmware, or account state. Use the checklist to narrow it down.
What should I test after each step?
Test the same symptom that made you open the guide. If the symptom changes, stop and follow the new clue instead of continuing blindly.
When should I ask for help?
The code appears with missing storage or repeated boot loops. A driver or firmware update caused repeated crashes. The next step risks data loss and there is no verified backup.
Related guides
Gpu Driver Update And Rollback Guide For Fps Drops
Use this related guide when the symptom points there.
Check Gpu Temperatures While Gaming
Use this related guide when the symptom points there.
Stop Random Game Crashes After A Driver Update
Use this related guide when the symptom points there.
Gpu Not Detected After Moving A Desktop Pc
Use this related guide when the symptom points there.
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NexyFix Hardware and Boot Desk
Boot and Hardware Education Editor
A role-based NexyFix editorial profile for storage compatibility, boot behavior, error codes, and when hardware symptoms need professional help.
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