New Windows 11 -Update dissolves a black screen bug that is one of the most annoying to hit PC gamers in a long time
- Advertisement -
- Windows 11 has a new optional update
- It dissolves a number of bugs that have been annoying gamers
- One of the most annoying glitches ensures that the monitor screen turns black for up to a few seconds when playing games, and it is now solved
Windows 11‘s Latest Patch brings some important improvements to PC gamersIncluding the resolution of a seriously frustrating glitch from black screen, and a number of useful changes are also offered elsewhere.
This is the Optional update for June (known as KB5060829) and, as Windows last reports, It introduces the aforementioned fixes for gamers, as well as accelerating the performance of a common task under Windows 11 – namely, loosening files.
However, let’s first look at those gaming-related solutions, and the highlight here is that Microsoft Has cure a problem in which “unnecessary display resets” happened to some people.
This bug manifests itself when the screen that turns black for a few seconds during gaming, and also in daily use. As one Redditor states it: “So this can solve that problem where my screen simply blinks for a fraction of a second while browsing certain websites and games?”
That is very hope, and many other Windows 11 gamers come in to say that they suffer through the hands of this bug. There are a few reports from users who claim that the solution has indeed worked, so that is a hopeful early sign. (Also remember that these fixes will be rolled out gradually, so not everyone will get the remedy immediately.)
Microsoft also lets us know that there is a further solution for a problem, where when graphic settings are changed to a game (or some apps), any attacking screens that occurs must be reduced.
Another resolution applied in the ‘graphics’ category for this optional update is the solution for some displays that go “unexpectedly green”, which I think is a reference to green screen crashes, instead of a visual corruption, although it could be the last, and Microsoft does not clarify this. Anyway, that would be an annoying problem to face, and it should be overcome now.
As already mentioned, there are also remarkably better performance when opening files compressed in the 7Z (7-Zip) or RAR formats that are supported native in File Explorer with Windows 11. The speed boost is the most noticeable in cases where large numbers of files are compressed, the newest observations must be getting out faster Windows is.
Other useful movements with this preview update include the taskbar to change automatically to change pictograms to fit more apps when it becomes pressure, and interesting enough we also get our first glimpse of the new PC-to-PC migration experience. The latter is delivered in the Windows Backup app, and that is have been testing earlierOffers an easy way to switch to a new PC.
This is only the first rollout, please note, and the PC-to-PC migration function will not have been completely switched on. To begin with, we get the destination page, just like a “first glance at what is coming”, and Microsoft notes that “support for this position during PC -Setup arrives in a future update.”
In the short term, however, this is more an important function for Windows 10 PCs and Microsoft will want to push it through for those devices with the operating systemS End-support Deadline Great. (Microsoft wants to have those people upgraded to a new Windows 11 -PC, which has caused a lot of controversy in recent times).
Finally, another useful touch for gamers with this patch is a solution for some apps that freeze when Alt-Tabbing is walked out of the game in the entire screen. A remark of caution here: Windows Lore explains that a few people who tested this patch experienced other craziness when Alt -Tabbing from games – as the mouse cursor remains – but at the moment these are only scattered reports. I wouldn’t read much about it yet.
Analysis: take a chance, or wait?
This is of course a preview update, and as such, bugs – such as the potential new problems with alt -tobbing – can be expected. Microsoft is still testing this patch prior to the release next month, and that is why it is optional.
That is why I usually recommend Windows 11 users to ignore these patches, especially because there is not long waiting before the full update is implemented, and any last-minute bugs will (hopefully) be ironed. This time the waiting is very short and the full update for Windows 11 in July arrives in just over a week.
Still, if a certain problem drives your really bananas, you might want to take your chances with the optional update at the moment (and hope that you are lucky in terms of the rollout time). And based on the feedback on Reddit, many people really suffer from the hands of the bug, making the screen black for about three seconds. If this happens at a crucial moment of a game, it can of course be seriously frustrating.
Indeed, many redditors say that this bug has taken care of it GPU director (which, given Nvidia’s current misery in that sense, is an obvious conclusion to reach). At least we now know that the problem with Windows 11 is, and fingers is crossed that this patch (and by extension the July release) completely dissolves this temporary drop -out for black screen.
Maybe you like it too …
- Advertisement -