Hello,
Over around the past week or so, the game has been nearly unplayable for me - after as little as 10 minutes sometimes, my game will get “0xC0000094 (INT_DIVIDE_BY_ZERO) at 00007ff71d87aee9” crashes. I’ve done a lot of research trying to fix this, and it seems some people have fixed this by undervolting their computer, but unluckily for me my stupid laptop has disabled this feature.
Is there anything that can be done? I am running a 13th Gen Intel(R) Core™ i9-13900HX 2.20 GHz, and apparently 13th gen intel cores have been having this issue. I am not super computer literate so I am trying my best to provide all the information I have haha. Below is a pastebin of the most recent crash, triggered right when the load screen to log into a character finished.
https://pastebin.com/tGCPJzm2
Not sure why it posted on my classic character, lol. This issue is for The War Within.
Your report link is not available.
Apologies, here is a link to another crash from today, with no addons enabled and sitting AFK in Dornogal.
Try checking the wow folders, to see what is flagged as read only. Also scan for malware. I’m seeing a security code on the crash.
Also recommend a ui reset by renaming the three folders. I know the addons are disabled, but there are a lot of them still listed in the crash log.
This might require you to delve into the BIOS. If you are using an Intel processor, namely a 13th/14th/15th gen processor, you will want to go into the BIOS and find P-Core Ratio. By default, it’s usually set to auto/default, which is 57 (5.7GHz). What you want to do is set it to 53 (5.3GHz).
You get far more stability, some cooler temps, and less issues with certain older games, all for a mere 1-3% FPS loss. It stopped crashes in WoW, ESO, and other older games for me. Turns out older games really just don’t like when your modern Intel CPU can suddenly spike to 5.7 GHz to 6.2 GHz for whatever reason.
AMD CPUs seem to completely not have this issue from what I’ve been able to gather.
It’s probably worth commenting on that if your P-Core Ratio is, by default, is lower than 53 (5.3 GHz), then the issue is not your BIOS settings, but something else.
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