Anti-cheat software crash officially resolved

Mar 31, 2019 06:20 GMT  ·  By

Microsoft has finally fixed a major issue in Windows 10 version 1903 as the company approaches the moment when it would begin the rollout for production devices across the world.

The company has recently updated the release notes of Windows 10 build 18362, which is available for both the Fast and the Slow rings and is believed to an RTM candidate, to state that a glitch experienced with anti-cheat software has been fixed.

Previously, the company warned that running certain games with anti-cheat software could have pushed computers to a fatal crash.

“Many games that use anti-cheat software have released fixes for the issue causing PCs to bugcheck (GSOD). The upgrade block that prevents Windows Insiders from updating to the latest build will be removed soon,” the release notes now reveal.

Two major bugs left

Without a doubt, this is good news for Windows 10 users, especially as this was one of the biggest bugs in the new feature update coming next month.

According to Microsoft’s own release schedule, Windows 10 version 1903 is supposed to be finalized in March, while the public launch should kick off in April. There still are no details regarding the RTM build, so although it’s already the end of March, we don’t know if this feature update is ready or not.

However, there are two other issues that Microsoft needs to resolve before beginning the public rollout. As per the release notes of the latest Windows 10 preview build, Creative X-Fi sound cards aren’t working properly, and the company said it was working with Creative on resolving this as soon as possible.

Additionally, some Realtek SD card readers aren’t working as they should, and once again, the software giant says it is investigating the problem and a fix should be rolled out as part of a cumulative update for insiders in the coming days.