Intel CPU crashes: what you need to know—first BIOS updates are here and Intel CPUs are getting two years of extended warranty (2024)

Intel CPU crashes: what you need to know—first BIOS updates are here and Intel CPUs are getting two years of extended warranty (1)

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  • The latest
  • BIOS downloads
  • What's the issue?
  • Timeline
  • My take
  • Some Intel 13th and 14th Gen CPUs (especially high-end ones) have been crashing, or even failing
  • The issue is caused by "elevated operating voltage"
  • It affects 13th and 14th Gen CPUs of 65 W Processor Base Power and higher
  • A microcode fix (0x129) is already rolling out for some MSI and Asus motherboards
  • If your CPU is affected by elevated operating voltage and you're experiencing instability, contact Intel customer support

Many PC gamers are understandably concerned about stability issues facing Intel 13th and 14th Gen CPUs, codename Raptor Lake, and especially the Core i9 13900K and Core i9 14900K. Over the past few months there have been increasing reports of stability issues and game crashes, and even some reports of chip failure.

Although issues were noted in 2023, in 2024 things only got more confusing as Intel, motherboard partners, game devs, tech journalists, and even Nvidia speculated about underlying causes or possible solutions. Intel's been investigating the issue, which it says is because of a microcode fault affecting voltages, and is pushing a microcode fix which has just started rolling out for some motherboards.

Status update: What's the latest

August 8, 2024: The first 0x129 microcode updates that are supposed to fix the instability issues have just started rolling out for some MSI and Asus motherboards. The MSI BIOS updates are found on the motherboards' official support pages but the Asus updates are on the MSI ROG forum and aren't yet on official support pages.

Intel has also recently expanded on its two-year extended warranty announcement, listing all CPUs this will cover, which range from the Core i5-13600KF up to the Core i9-14900KS. Boxed processor customers (ie, people who bought directly from Intel) can contact Intel Customer Support for assistance, but tray processor customers will need to contact their place of purchase.

We're still waiting to hear more from Intel about the "elevated operating voltage" that it says is causing instability issues in 13th and 14th Gen CPUs that have a Processor Base Power of 65W or higher. That includes all K-series desktop processors.

Currently released BIOS fixes

Here are the BIOS updates currently available that feature the new microcode:

  • MEG Z790 GODLIKE MAX
  • MEG Z790 ACE MAX
  • MPG Z790 CARBON MAX WIFI II
  • MPG Z790 CARBON WIFI

What's the issue, exactly?

Intel CPU crashes: what you need to know—first BIOS updates are here and Intel CPUs are getting two years of extended warranty (2)

From mid-2023 onwards, we started to hear increasing reports from game devs and gamers that high-end Intel 13th and 14th Gen CPUs (primarily the Core i9 13900K and Core i9 14900K) were crashing in Unreal Engine games. By mid-July 2024 it became obvious that these Raptor Lake CPUs have stability issues. Both CPUs in servers and end-user systems have been noted to have a high prevalence of crashes and even chip failure.

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These crashes seem to occur during shader compression/decompression/compilation in games. The crash errors often reference a problem with video memory, which might hint at a GPU issue but, in fact, are caused by the CPU. The errors might also reference data corruption. The stability issues also seem to manifest as general crashes, hang-ups, or unpredictable behaviour when the CPU is under heavy loads.

Over the past few months, the solutions offered up have been only temporary band-aids, such as underclocking or undervolting the CPU, which game devs and Nvidia recommended. In what now seems like another band-aid, back in April, Intel recommended motherboard manufacturers implement BIOS files that adhere to Intel's recommended power profiles. Manufacturers started to do so, but unfortunately the updated BIOS files didn't follow Intel's latest recommendations.

Now, Intel has admitted that there's actually a problem with the CPU microcode causing "elevated operating voltage" in affected processors and is rolling out a mid-August microcode patch to fix the issue. While Intel has said it won't recall chips already affected, the company encourages anyone facing issues to contact customer support.

When did we know about the issue?

The first hints that something might be wrong with Intel 13th and 14th Gen CPUs came during mid- to late-2023 when some game developers identified heightened crashing risks for them in games.

In its August 2023 Remnant 2 update notes (via TechSpot), Gearbox stated: "We have identified an issue on some Intel 13th generation CPUs where upon startup the game will display a message about being out of video memory or the crash reporter will pop up referencing an issue with decompressing a shader. If you experience this problem, you will likely also see it in other DX12 games."

Gearbox recommended underclocking affected CPUs using Intel's Extreme Tuning Utility (XTU).

At the end of 2023, Vermintide 2 developer Fatshark said, "It has been noted that players with the Intel i9 13900k/14900k and Intel i7 13700k/14700k CPUs are prone to these crashes. Players have been able to work around this by underclocking the 'Performance Core' speed using Intel XTU, from x55 to x53."

Similar reports continued into 2024. In February, RAD, a division of Epic Games, pointed the finger at Intel for Unreal Engine game crashes, stating, "We believe that this is a hardware problem which affects primarily Intel 13900K and 14900K processors, less likely 13700, 14700 and other related processors as well."

Intel CPU crashes: what you need to know—first BIOS updates are here and Intel CPUs are getting two years of extended warranty (4)

More and more Unreal Engine games seemed to be having problems with the current- and previous-gen Intel processors, particularly the high-end Core i9 13900K and Core i9 14900K, primarily during shader compilation. Around this time, all kinds of potential causes and solutions were bandied about, including undervolting the CPU.

In seeming agreement with Fatshark and others, Nvidia reportedly recommended (via Tom's Hardware) affected users underclock their CPUs (and remember that clock frequency scales with voltage, so an underclock is equivalent to an indirect undervolt).

Intel eventually started investigating the issue, telling ZDNet Korea that it "is aware of problems that occur when executing certain tasks on 13th and 14th generation core processors for desktop PCs, and is analyzing them with major affiliates." It was also leaked that Intel recommended partnered "system and motherboard manufacturers to provide end users with a default BIOS profile that matches Intel recommended settings."

Top CPU coolers

Intel CPU crashes: what you need to know—first BIOS updates are here and Intel CPUs are getting two years of extended warranty (5)

Best AIO cooler for CPUs: Keep your chip chill.
Best air cooler for CPUs: Classic, quiet cooling.

Motherboard manufacturers started to implement "recommended" Intel Baseline Profiles to BIOS files. Asus added a Baseline profile, but it didn't do quite what Intel recommended. Other motherboard vendors followed suit, releasing BIOS updates that, according to Intel, didn't fully adhere to Intel's recommendations.

Intel said (via Hardwareluxx), "Several motherboard manufacturers have released BIOS profiles labeled 'Intel Baseline Profile'. However, these BIOS profiles are not the same as the 'Intel Default Settings' recommendations that Intel has recently shared with its partners regarding the instability issues reported on 13th and 14th gen K SKU processors."

The company then presented a table to make clear its actual recommendations and pressured motherboard manufacturers to implement proper default settings.

Then, in June, Intel found and patched a CPU microcode bug that wasn't the root cause of the problems but could have "potentially contributed" to 13th and 14th Gen instability. But given that the bug in question was to do with a thermal boost feature on the i9 chips, this only raised further questions about deeper thermal and voltage issues.

The stability issues were then brought back into the full light of day when, in mid-July, game developer Alderon Games said it was switching all its servers to AMD, claiming it's "only a matter of time before affected CPUs fail."

Intel has a Pretty Big Problem - YouTubeIntel CPU crashes: what you need to know—first BIOS updates are here and Intel CPUs are getting two years of extended warranty (6)

Watch On

Further intrigue was sparked when YouTuber Level1Tech investigated Intel stability issues by looking through data some game devs gave him, finding that 90% of errors occurred for Intel 13th and 14th Gen systems. Level1Tech also spoke to a datacentre service provider that confirmed "unusually high" support incidents for Intel 13th and 14th Gen configurations.

The fact that servers seemed to be facing issues with 13th and 14th Gen chips made people think it might not be caused by high-end CPUs being pushed to the limits, because server CPUs are often lower power for stability.

Nevertheless, there was still reasonable speculation that the issues could be because of elevated or incorrect voltages. For instance, on 14 July, Buildzoid pointed out that the stability issues seem to be worse on higher voltages, which is why the Core i5 14600K and lower have fewer crash reports, because they mostly operate below 1.4V.

There's also been speculation over the issue being degradation caused by oxidation, but Intel has denied that oxidation is related to the current stability issues. It has, however, confirmed that Oxidation issues were "identified in late 2022" and that the company was "able to confirm full removal of impacted processors in our supply chain by early 2024," but that "on-shelf inventory may have persisted into early 2024 as a result." Whatever the case, Intel claims this is unrelated to the stability issues in question.

Intel then confirmed that the stability issues are, as others had speculated, to do with incorrect voltages, telling us that "elevated operating voltage is causing instability issues in some 13th/14th Gen desktop" and this "is stemming from a microcode algorithm resulting in incorrect voltage requests to the processor." It also said it is "delivering a microcode patch which addresses the root cause of exposure to elevated voltages," and that it's targeting mid-August for the patch release.

Intel CPU crashes: what you need to know—first BIOS updates are here and Intel CPUs are getting two years of extended warranty (7)

Since then, it's mostly been a waiting game. But Intel has told The Verge that it won't recall chips already affected, stating that "customers experiencing instability on their 13th or 14th Generation desktop processor-based systems should contact Intel customer support for further assistance."

The company also confirmed that 13th and 14th Gen processors with a 65W Processor Base Power or higher could be affected (though of course not all will be). This means not just the i9s, but potentially all the way down to the Core i5 13400 and Core i5 14400, too.

That's where we're at right now, at least officially. The first BIOS updates that should feature an official microcode fix for the instability issues have just started rolling out for some MSI And Asus motherboards. (So, fingers crossed the fix works.)

Unofficially, though, the speculation and investigation continues.

For instance, Buildzoid has been looking at Intel CPU voltages through oscilloscope, and, according to one forum summary, shows the problem looks to be caused by non-standard transient voltage spikes (in addition to the more normal ones). These spikes won't be picked up by normal voltage monitoring programs because they occur too quickly. This, so the theory goes, might be causing the processors to degrade prematurely.

There's also some optimism on the unofficial speculation front, too, this being that Workstation builder Puget Systems seems to be having few issues with Intel 13th and 14th Gen CPUs, probably because the company sets its own BIOS settings ("especially power settings") based on extensive testing. This suggests that taking extra care with BIOS settings could prevent some of the stability issues people seem to be facing.

That's unofficial, though, so for now we await further word from Intel. It might already be too late for public opinion and reputation, however, as a law firm has already started investigating whether to launch a class-action lawsuit against Intel over the instability issues. (Update: Now possibly two law firms.)

Intel recently announced "two-year extended warranty support for our boxed Intel Core 13th and 14th Gen desktop processors," and has listed the processors this applies to, which range from the Core i5 13600KF to the Core i9 14900KS. If you bought the processor from Intel you can contact Intel customer support here, but if you bought a tray processor from a third-party seller you'll have to contact your place of purchase.

Here's what I think

Intel CPU crashes: what you need to know—first BIOS updates are here and Intel CPUs are getting two years of extended warranty (8)

I can't reliably recommend purchasing an Intel 13th or 14th Gen CPU right now, at least not without some major warnings in place.

This is because Intel has been less than forthcoming about the prevalence of affected CPUs, the kinds of problems they're likely to face, and how 13th and 14th Gen users can tell whether their CPU has already been affected. We also don't know which CPU batches were affected by the separate issue of oxidation.

Intel's taken too long, in my opinion, to investigate and resolve these problems. These issues were noted as far back as mid-2023, and they were noted with some prevalence early in 2024. The back-and-forth between Intel and motherboard partners earlier in the year only seemed to obfuscate the issue for ordinary PC gamers.

If the microcode patch that's just started rolling out fixes the problem and we can be sure all newly purchased 13th and 14th Gen CPUs will be fine, I can happily recommend them again. But until we know that's the case, I advise caution. The fixes others have suggested (such as underclocking) are band-aids to a deeper underlying problem and, at any rate, decrease performance, so the official microcode patch is what we're waiting for.

Intel CPU crashes: what you need to know—first BIOS updates are here and Intel CPUs are getting two years of extended warranty (9)

Jacob Fox

Hardware Writer

Jacob got his hands on a gaming PC for the first time when he was about 12 years old. He swiftly realised the local PC repair store had ripped him off with his build and vowed never to let another soul build his rig again. With this vow, Jacob the hardware junkie was born. Since then, Jacob's led a double-life as part-hardware geek, part-philosophy nerd, first working as a Hardware Writer for PCGamesN in 2020, then working towards a PhD in Philosophy for a few years (result pending a patiently awaited viva exam) while freelancing on the side for sites such as TechRadar, Pocket-lint, and yours truly, PC Gamer. Eventually, he gave up the ruthless mercenary life to join the world's #1 PC Gaming site full-time. It's definitely not an ego thing, he assures us.

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