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Microsoft pushes emergency fix for Windows 10 KB5001330 gaming issues

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Microsoft has released an emergency fix for gaming issues introduced by the Windows 10 2004 and Windows 10 20H2 KB5001330 update.

With this release of the KB5000842 of the Windows 10 preview cumulative update at the end of March and in the subsequent release of April’s KB5001330 update, Windows 10 users have been experiencing performance issues when playing games.

The issues experienced while playing games include decreased frame rate, video stuttering, and flickering textures.

“So i rollback to Windows 10 1909 build 18363.1500 and i’dont have any problem with the latest nvidia drivers, even youtube runs smooth without stuttering and vsync works without problems, there’s something wrong with windows update,” a Windows 10 users reported on the NVIDIA forums.

NVIDIA recommended that users uninstall the recent Windows 10 updates to resolve these issues in response to these complaints, which did resolve the problems but left people open to security vulnerabilities fixed in the recent updates.

Last night, Microsoft released an emergency fix for Windows 10 2004 and 20H2 to resolve these issues.

“A small subset of users have reported lower than expected performance in games after installing KB5000842 or later updates. Most users affected by this issue are running games full screen or borderless windowed modes and using two or more monitors,” Microsoft stated in the Windows 10 2004 and Windows 20H2 known issues and notifications site.

This fix is being rolled out using Microsoft’s Known Issue Rollback (KIR) feature to send out a minor fix via Windows Update, which should propagate to affected users within 24 hours.

“This issue is resolved using Known Issue Rollback (KIR). Please note that it might take up to 24 hours for the resolution to propagate automatically to consumer devices and non-managed business devices. Restarting your device might help the resolution apply to your device faster.”

“For enterprise-managed devices that have installed an affected update and encountered this issue, it can be resolved by installing and configuring a special Group PolicyNote Devices need to be restarted after configuring the special Group Policy. For help, please see How to use Group Policy to deploy a Known Issue Rollback. For general information on using Group Policies, see Group Policy Overview“, explains Microsoft.

Microsoft Known Issue Rollback feature uses diagnostics shared by Windows 10 with Microsoft to find issues affecting a large number of people.

When an issue is identified, Microsoft can issue a KIR fix through Windows Update to those affected by the bug to be fixed quickly outside of the standard Windows update schedule.

Illustration of how Known Issue Rollout fixes are delivered
Illustration of how Known Issue Rollout fixes are delivered

In the past, Microsoft was able to use Known Issue Rollout to fix a Microsoft Store bug preventing users from accessing paid content. Using KIR, Microsoft was able to fix the bug for 145 million Windows 10 users after identifying a fix.

While these fixes are distributed via Windows Update, they are not delivered as an actual update. Therefore, there is no easy way for Windows 10 users to know when a Known Issue Rollout fix has been delivered.

As the rollout of the fix is expected to be completed within 24 hours, users can routinely reboot their computers and check if their gaming issues have been resolved. 

Source: https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/microsoft/microsoft-pushes-emergency-fix-for-windows-10-kb5001330-gaming-issues/

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