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Are you talking about Radeon Integrated Graphic ( if such thing exist)?
I don't know much about PCs, that's why I asked.
1. Right click NMS in your steam library, then properties and navigate to the section to verify the integrity of local game files. Then test. If that doesnt help, then
2. Go to the steam help menu, click "system information" and then copy paste all that here so we can specifically see what steam detects for your comp and any potential discrepancies that may have relevance. Saying you have xyz isnt always accurate info and steam in not a small number of cases can show things that may have relation to your issues.
3. If as erich indicated that you're using a comp that only has an onboard graphic chipset and not a fully dedicated graphic card, this may be a contributing factor. Steam system info will help show one way or the other.
Start with those basics and lets see then from there.
If you can upload your crash dunp file into a cloud, with permission to download it, I´ll look into it
it should be in :
WinKey + R opens RUN than copy this: %localappdata%\Temp
and looks like :
NMS_crash_xxxxxxxxxx_NMSVersion_0xCrashcode_SteamID.dmp
Ok, here's what I got. All file integrity has been verified.
Steam's report on my system info:
Computer Information:
Manufacturer: HP
Model: HP Pavilion Desktop TP01-2xxx
Form Factor: Desktop
No Touch Input Detected
Processor Information:
CPU Vendor: AuthenticAMD
CPU Brand: AMD Ryzen 7 5700G with Radeon Graphics
CPU Family: 0x19
CPU Model: 0x50
CPU Stepping: 0x0
CPU Type: 0x0
Speed: 3793 MHz
16 logical processors
8 physical processors
Hyper-threading: Supported
FCMOV: Supported
SSE2: Supported
SSE3: Supported
SSSE3: Supported
SSE4a: Supported
SSE41: Supported
SSE42: Supported
AES: Supported
AVX: Supported
AVX2: Supported
AVX512F: Unsupported
AVX512PF: Unsupported
AVX512ER: Unsupported
AVX512CD: Unsupported
AVX512VNNI: Unsupported
SHA: Supported
CMPXCHG16B: Supported
LAHF/SAHF: Supported
PrefetchW: Unsupported
Operating System Version:
Windows 11 (64 bit)
NTFS: Unsupported
Crypto Provider Codes: Supported 311 0x0 0x0 0x0
Video Card:
Driver: AMD Radeon(TM) Graphics
DirectX Driver Name: aticfx32.dll
Driver Version: 31.0.21910.11004
DirectX Driver Version: 31.0.21910.11004
Driver Date: 6 24 2024
OpenGL Version: 4.6
Desktop Color Depth: 32 bits per pixel
Monitor Refresh Rate: 60 Hz
DirectX Card: AMD Radeon(TM) Graphics
VendorID: 0x1002
DeviceID: 0x1638
Revision: 0xc8
Number of Monitors: 1
Number of Logical Video Cards: 1
No SLI or Crossfire Detected
Primary Display Resolution: 2560 x 1440
Desktop Resolution: 2560 x 1440
Primary Display Size: 27.44" x 15.43" (31.46" diag), 69.7cm x 39.2cm (79.9cm diag)
Primary Bus Type Not Detected
Primary VRAM: 512 MB
Supported MSAA Modes: 2x 4x 8x
Sound card:
Audio device: Speakers (Samson C01U Pro Mic)
Memory:
RAM: 32095 Mb
VR Hardware:
VR Headset: None detected
Miscellaneous:
UI Language: English
Media Type: Undetermined
Total Hard Disk Space Available: 8606633 MB
Largest Free Hard Disk Block: 7317169 MB
OS Install Date: Dec 12 2022
Game Controller: None detected
MAC Address hash: 03457f1471eb405e7cbae59bb1ee1ab13d820275
Storage:
Disk serial number hash: a37d380b
Number of SSDs: 1
SSD sizes: 1024G
Number of HDDs: 1
HDD sizes: 8001G
Number of removable drives: 0
Basically, your computer doesnt have a dedicated graphics card and has 512mb vram only on the onboard graphic chipset. Its basically an office comp that just happens to be able to play a limited number of games.
Here's a decent review regarding its capabilities:
https://pcper.com/2022/06/amd-ryzen-7-5700g-processor-with-radeon-graphics-review/
Long story short, you were pushing it to play the game to begin with and you may be able to play in some of the lowest possible settings for graphic fidelity to help performance but you're still going to likely be dice rolling because its essentially the equivalent of a vega 8:
https://www.pcgamebenchmark.com/no-mans-sky-system-requirements?result
Thus, if you want to be able to play without(or limiting at least) issues, you're going to need to buy a dedicated graphic card compatible with that comp you got.
Best of luck.
I second that. Primary VRAM: 512 MB is the red flag.
They say that some machines can be tricked into using the disk for VRAM in the bios settings or increasing it in the bios settings. I've personally never had a pc that let me do that.
If (and I mean if) your current computer is capable of getting a dedicated graphic card(as some arent due to the way some companies make their models), just look into a cheap graphics card that is compatible with your comp if you've the budget for it.
However, if you have a sizable budget, I'd recommend just getting something that lets you play things going into the future. You cant truly "future proof" of course but if you chase adding a 500-1000US card now that struggles far behind for game play, then in the long run you'd be likely spending more for a piece after piece you replace(or get to a bad point after 1000's spent that you need a full new comp due to old/incompatability issues). So, you may want to just save up until you can get to the point to buy a strong comp and be patient with what you're capable of currently playing in the mean time. Its not an ideal situation but you have to remember that comp gaming tends to be an expensive hobby.