NVIDIA Pushes Out New GeForce Hotfix Driver 576.15, Addressing Display Crashing & GPU Temperature Sensor Issues

Apr 21, 2025 at 02:53pm EDT
NVIDIA's Entire GeForce RTX 50 Family Now Showing Up In Steam Hardware Survey, Total Share Reaches 3.69% Since Launch

NVIDIA has released a new hotfix for its GeForce display driver, attempting to solve the "troublesome" display issues and a new GPU temperature bug.

NVIDIA's Latest Driver Hotfix Is Another Attempt To Sort Out The Troublesome Display Crashing Issues

Well, this has to be one of the only times we have seen so many hotfixes being released for a driver, as it seems like NVIDIA did find some difficulty when it comes to providing software support for its RTX 50 series GPUs. Honestly, I have lost count for now, but it seems like Team Green has pushed out a new hotfix v576.15 driver that has addressed several issues, including the display crashes which came with the original v576.02 driver, along with a temperature sensor bug that apparently messed up with GPU voltages and clock speeds.

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This hotfix addresses the following:

While we have known for a while about the display problems with NVIDIA's RTX 50 drivers, the new temperature sensor bug, however, involved GPU temperature stats being incorrect, specifically after a system sleep. It is claimed that, for some reason, the GPU temperature sensor doesn't work correctly once there's a temporary power halt, and it really did prove to be troublesome for several users out there. However, the latest hotfix driver has addressed this, so consumers won't face this issue for now.

You can download the GeForce Hotfix display driver version 576.15 here, and check it out to see whether it resolves the display crashing, or even temperature sensor issues.

About the author: Muhammad Zuhair is a hardware and technology reporter for Wccftech, specializing in the semiconductor industry and the complex interplay between technology, manufacturing, and geopolitics. His coverage focuses on the corporate strategies and technological roadmaps of industry giants like TSMC, NVIDIA, Samsung, and Intel. Zuhair's expertise lies in deconstructing complex topics such as fabrication nodes (e.g., 2nm process), the economic impact of policies like the CHIPS Act, and the strategic development of AI infrastructure from NVIDIA, AMD and Intel.

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