Ruined Mind
New Member
- Joined
- Jun 29, 2022
- Messages
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I have a Radeon RX 6400 card. One or two years ago, I wanted to play an old game that uses OpenGL, but the current driver of that time caused the game to constantly crash (unavoidable), so I wanted to use an older version of the driver, but Windows automatically switched to a newer version. (I used the "Display Driver Uninstaller" program, in Safe Mode, to uninstall the new driver and installed the old version while my internet connection was disabled.)
(I've heard reports of Nvidia cards not being affected by this problem while a program called "GeForce Experience" is installed, because GeForce Experience gains control of the updating process, so people could stay on an old version of the driver, but I haven't confirmed this, because I haven't ever needed to stay on an old version of an Nvidia driver.)
I will attempt to remember what I did to cause Windows 10 to allow me to stay on the old version. The Radeon control panel might have been different after the process, but my memory of that is unclear. I know the in-game overlay of performance statistics of MSI Afterburner either showed incorrect values or was unable to read some parameters that it usually could (I've forgotten). (Please forgive me if this will produce the same result as your previous attempt, which you said shows version "23.20.30" and may be using 23.11.1 internally. I'll still write it IN CASE the result will be different.)
1.
Disable your internet connection, and use "Display Driver Uninstaller" in Safe Mode again.
2.
Install the old version of the driver again.
3.
Enable your internet connection. Wait until Windows has switched to the new version of the driver again.
4.
Go to the "Device Manager". Click the arrow next to "Display Adapters", then right-click your graphics card, and click "Properties".
5.
A small window will be opened. Click the "Driver" tab, and click "Roll Back Driver". That will cause Windows to switch back to the version that YOU installed, right BEFORE it automatically switched to the new version. When I used this method, a little box opened that asked me to describe the reason I want to use the old version. I mentioned that only an old version of the driver allows an old game to function well. Consider writing a detailed note, in case an engineer from Microsoft or AMD will read it.
6.
After that, I was able to play the game with the old version of the driver, and it didn't ever switch back to the new version again, until I manually CHOSE to install a new version.
I'll say it again:
The Radeon control panel might have been different after the process, and the in-game overlay of MSI Afterburner might have been negatively affected, but I was able to finish the game. It didn't ever crash.
(I've heard reports of Nvidia cards not being affected by this problem while a program called "GeForce Experience" is installed, because GeForce Experience gains control of the updating process, so people could stay on an old version of the driver, but I haven't confirmed this, because I haven't ever needed to stay on an old version of an Nvidia driver.)
I will attempt to remember what I did to cause Windows 10 to allow me to stay on the old version. The Radeon control panel might have been different after the process, but my memory of that is unclear. I know the in-game overlay of performance statistics of MSI Afterburner either showed incorrect values or was unable to read some parameters that it usually could (I've forgotten). (Please forgive me if this will produce the same result as your previous attempt, which you said shows version "23.20.30" and may be using 23.11.1 internally. I'll still write it IN CASE the result will be different.)
1.
Disable your internet connection, and use "Display Driver Uninstaller" in Safe Mode again.
2.
Install the old version of the driver again.
3.
Enable your internet connection. Wait until Windows has switched to the new version of the driver again.
4.
Go to the "Device Manager". Click the arrow next to "Display Adapters", then right-click your graphics card, and click "Properties".
5.
A small window will be opened. Click the "Driver" tab, and click "Roll Back Driver". That will cause Windows to switch back to the version that YOU installed, right BEFORE it automatically switched to the new version. When I used this method, a little box opened that asked me to describe the reason I want to use the old version. I mentioned that only an old version of the driver allows an old game to function well. Consider writing a detailed note, in case an engineer from Microsoft or AMD will read it.
6.
After that, I was able to play the game with the old version of the driver, and it didn't ever switch back to the new version again, until I manually CHOSE to install a new version.
I'll say it again:
The Radeon control panel might have been different after the process, and the in-game overlay of MSI Afterburner might have been negatively affected, but I was able to finish the game. It didn't ever crash.
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