Click on any specific day to see exactly which application or hardware driver failed. 2. Dive Deep with Event Viewer
Have you noticed any error codes when it overheats? Share public link
If prompted to schedule the scan for the next reboot, type Y and restart your PC. The system will scan for bad sectors and recover readable information. 4. Uncover the Root Cause with Reliability Monitor
DISM checks the health of your Windows local image. It prepares the system for the next repair step. Right-click the button. Select Terminal (Admin) or Command Prompt (Admin) .
SFC uses the healthy local image provided by DISM to repair individual broken files.
If nothing else fixes your PC, resetting Windows 11 is a final option. It reinstalls the operating system while giving you the choice to keep your personal files (though apps will be removed). Go to > System > Recovery and click Reset PC . This should be a last resort after exhausting all other options.
Outdated display drivers or BIOS versions can cause components to pull more power than necessary, generating excess heat.
Press Ctrl + Shift + Esc . Click the CPU or Memory column header to sort by highest usage. If a process is consistently over 90%, it is causing your system to run hot.
You will see a graph displaying your system’s stability over recent days and weeks on a scale from 1 to 10.
For recurring or vague errors, the Event Viewer provides a log of exactly what is failing in the background.
For deeper diagnostics, the Event Viewer logs every system event. This is where you find the technical details behind error messages and Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) entries.
65°C – 80°C (149°F – 176°F)