Quick Answer

A BSOD on an RX 9070 XT build is almost always a driver or power issue: clean-install the AMD Adrenalin driver with DDU, confirm a 750W-plus ATX 3.1 PSU with the correct PCIe power seated fully, and test memory with EXPO off. Most RX 9070 XT crashes trace to driver conflicts or loose power connectors rather than a faulty card.

Common RX 9070 XT Crash Causes

The RX 9070 XT draws around 260-300W, so power delivery is the first suspect. A BSOD under load often means a loose or undersized PCIe power connection or a daisy-chained cable that cannot supply stable current. The second cause is a driver conflict, common after a Windows update. The third is unstable EXPO memory pushed beyond what the kit holds.

Step-By-Step Fix

First, run DDU in safe mode and install the latest AMD Adrenalin driver cleanly. Second, confirm a 750W-plus ATX 3.1 PSU and reseat all PCIe power connectors fully, using native cables. Third, disable EXPO and test stability; if crashes stop, retune the memory. Fourth, update the motherboard BIOS and monitor temperatures during a load test.

Reading The Stop Code

The BSOD stop code helps: VIDEO_TDR_FAILURE points to the GPU driver, WHEA_UNCORRECTABLE_ERROR to power or memory, and MEMORY_MANAGEMENT to RAM. Note it before troubleshooting to target the real cause quickly.

FAQ

Why does my RX 9070 XT build blue-screen?

Usually a driver conflict, a loose or undersized power connector, or unstable EXPO memory. A clean Adrenalin reinstall and properly seated PCIe power fix most cases.

What PSU does an RX 9070 XT need?

A 750W-plus ATX 3.1 unit with native PCIe power cables. Avoid daisy-chaining a single cable across two connectors on a card drawing 260-300W.

Does disabling EXPO help?

It can. If crashes stop with EXPO off, the memory profile is unstable and needs retuning or a more conservative speed for reliable operation.

TIP

AMD Adrenalin driver with DDU and reseat the PCIe power cables; together these clear most RX 9070 XT blue screens.