pds41: Could be a PSU issue, also RAM is possible, but usually you would have some indication of an error message or blue screening (and RAM doesn't usually just die - it's normally DOA or incompatible with the motherboard/processor combination)
Cgamer1: Well, i was hoping for an answer to my question, about the cyri site, but anyway.
my specs are:
MSI x299m a pro motherboard
radeon rx 570 graphic card with 8gb (msi armor) (This has AMD software, could this interfere with INTEL cpu?)
16 gb of ram
Intel core i5-7640x cpu
i'm using an internal hard drive and uh.. the latest game that I bought that led to a full system crash is gas station simulator. Now when I say full system crash. that means the whole system crashes, making it so I have to power it back on. there is no BSOD or weird messages. just total blackness. system goes down. no signal for monitor.
I believe I have updated drivers and my OS. I however am not sure if the parts are overheating so i will take a look at that openhardware monitor.
there are several other games that has caused this issue. I felt it occured often enough that warranted making a tag for it.
pds41: ATi/AMD Graphics and Intel CPU isn't a problem. The RX570 is a GTX1060 equivalent, so is sufficient to run your game and the 7640x is a pretty good CPU, on a par with previous generation Ryzen.
The reason we're ignoring the website is that we don't think it's relevant to your problem. It's more likely that there's an underlying hardware failure, which a website designed to see if the parts in your computer match listed parts needed to run a game just isn't going to pick up.
hmm. bummer. ok then the cyri website is out as an "factor"
pds41: Could be a PSU issue
Ice_Mage: Yes, that's looking most likely. If the PSU/computer is still under warranty, I'd look into returning it. You should definitely not delay and replace it ASAP if when the computer is on there's a burning smell or smoke coming from the case. Otherwise,
• Make sure the inside of the case and the exterior of the PSU aren't clogged with dust.
• Try connecting the PSU directly to the outlet, if it isn't already.
• Try connecting the PSU to a different outlet.
• Try changing the power cable, if you happen to have a spare.
You could tell us the brand, model, and wattage. That would let us check if it's enough to power your system, but there isn't much we can do to check if your PSU is faulty.
Cgamer1: i'm using an internal hard drive
Ice_Mage: The following is unrelated to your issue; hard drive drives are great for storage, but very slow for running games. Your motherboard supports M.2 SSDs, so once you resolve this, consider getting one to improve OS and game load times.
I built this computer myself two years ago. no burning smell or smoke so far. just black (full system) crashes.
the PSU is a thermaltake SMART with 600 Watts. 80+ certified. ATX 12v 2.3/EPS 12v.
Back then when I used pcpartspicker to build this, it said the whole thing need about 373 watts so I got this.. 600 should be enough. shouldn' t it?
I never planned to get a SSD, but i guess I'll look into it maybe.