Blue Screens in Windows 11/10/8 are simple and do not display Stop Error information. You may have to force Windows to display Stop Error details.

What is the first step to take to resolve a Blue Screen of Death error

The BSODs or Stop Errors in Windows 11/10 appear to be better and more user-friendly and easier on the eyes. But they don’t give many details. You have to force your OS to display Stop Error information in Windows.

How to fix Blue Screen of Death error in Windows 11/10

The common troubleshooting steps to fix Blue Screen errors in Windows 11/10 to be followed are: These are some basic tips to help you fix Blue Screen of Death in Windows under different scenarios. This guide will help you understand, analyze and troubleshoot Windows Blue Screen of Death, Stop Errors, Error Codes, Bug Check errors, system crash errors, system fault, kernel error crashes in Windows 10/8/7. If you need a walkthrough, see if the Online Windows Blue Screen Troubleshooter will help you. NOTE: If you can log in normally, good; else you will have to boot into Safe Mode, enter the Advanced Startup options screen, or use the Installation Media to boot to be able to carry out these instructions.

Blue Screen of Death when upgrading to Windows 11/10

When upgrading to Windows 10 from Windows 8.1 or Windows 7, or to Windows 11 from Windows 10, you may face BSOD. Normally, this would happen due to BIOS settings. In some cases, the error could be due to a corrupted download of the installer. If you get the Blue Screen Of Death when upgrading, the installer will take you back to the original operating system. From there, you have to run the upgrade installer again. You will not be stuck with a half-installed Windows 11/10. But installation files will be there on your C: Drive that you’d need to clean before running the upgrade again. You will have to delete all files in the Software Distribution folder under the Windows folder. You will also have to remove the Windows~BT folder from C Drive. After deleting these files, go to the BIOS (press DEL while booting up) and enable UEFI Boot before trying to upgrade again. It would be better if you use the installation media provided by Microsoft to upgrade. The in-place upgrade takes too much time and might again cause a problem. Just go to your original operating system. Then run Setup.exe from the installation media you created. It should help you get around BSOD while upgrading to Windows 11/10.

Blue Screen of Death while Booting Windows 11/10

There are two scenarios when booting Windows 10. In the first scenario, you can access the desktop while in the second, the Blue Screen of Death won’t even let you reach the desktop, and you are stuck in a loop of computer restarts. The main reasons why BSOD appears are: If you can access the desktop, go to Settings and then Windows Updates. Click on Advanced and then on View Installed Updates. See the date of the updates and remove the ones installed on the date after which, the BSOD is appearing. If removing the updates fixes the problem, block the update from reinstalling itself. If the problem is a driver update, you need to see if any drivers were installed lately. The process is the same as above. You will see driver updates in Installed Updates. But after removing the update, I suggest you block automatic driver updates from Microsoft. Using a third-party tool that allows you to select the driver version is better. That way you will be playing it safer. Read: How to find which Driver is causing the Blue Screen on Windows?

BSOD reboot loop prevents access to Desktop

If you are stuck in a Blue Screen of Death reboot loop, Windows 11/10 will automatically go into the Repair mode after a while. From there, use the System Restore facility to fix the issue. Click on System Restore and select a date/point before you started getting BSOD. System Restore will restore your computer to a prior time, removing any changes made to your computer by Windows Update. It will not affect your files.

Blue Screen of Death while working on Windows 11/10

The causes can again be a Windows Update, a device driver update, or recently installed hardware. To make sure the updates are the reason, use the method explained above to isolate the problem update and then block it. If you installed any hardware recently, shut down your computer and remove the hardware. Then boot and go to Device Manager (WinKey+Break). If the hardware is still listed there, uninstall it. Reboot to see if the issue is fixed. Useful resource: List of Windows Bug Check or Stop Error Codes. Read: Purple, Brown, Yellow, Red, Green Screen of Death explained.