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Is AMD Driver Causing Trouble? Simple Ways to Safely Downgrade on Windows!

Ready for a Smoother Experience? How Can You Easily Fix Bad AMD Updates on Windows?

How to Downgrade AMD Drivers on Windows: Clear Steps for Stress-Free Results
When a new AMD driver makes your computer misbehave—like causing crashes, screen blackouts, or games that won’t start—it’s time to go back to an older, more stable version. Here’s how you can get your system working again, even if you’re not a tech expert. Follow these steps one by one and your PC should feel better soon.

Why Downgrade an AMD Driver?

  • New drivers can sometimes break things that used to work fine.
  • If your screen goes dark, games crash, or you see “Microsoft Basic Display Adapter” instead of AMD, a Windows update may have replaced your AMD driver.
  • Rolling back to a previous AMD driver can bring your computer back to life.

Methods to Downgrade AMD Drivers

Method 1. Roll Back with Device Manager

  1. Press the Windows logo (or tap the key), then type “Device Manager” and open it.
  2. Expand Display adapters.
  3. Right-click your AMD device (example: AMD Radeon).
  4. Select Properties, then go to the Driver tab.
  5. If the Roll Back Driver button is not gray, click it and follow instructions.
  6. Restart your computer.

If the button is gray, Windows can’t use this method. Try the next steps instead.

Method 2. Use Microsoft Basic Display Adapter

  1. Open Device Manager as above.
  2. Right-click your AMD device.
  3. Click Update driver > Browse my computer for drivers.
  4. Click Let me pick from a list of available drivers.
  5. Pick Microsoft Basic Display Adapter, click Next, and finish setup.
  6. Restart your PC.

This lets you uninstall the problematic AMD driver and prepares for a clean reinstall.

Method 3. Manually Download and Install an Older AMD Driver

  1. Go to the official AMD Driver page.
  2. Enter your graphics product (for example, “RX 6700 XT” or “RX 580”).
  3. Choose the correct version for your Windows system.
  4. Scroll to Previous Drivers and look for an older version than what you now have.
  5. Download the installer and save it.
  6. Back in Device Manager, right-click your AMD device and uninstall the current driver if you can.
  7. Run the older driver installer you downloaded and follow prompts.
  8. Restart your PC again.

Method 4. Deep Clean with Display Driver Uninstaller (DDU)

Best if your system has lots of problems or the usual uninstall isn’t working.

  1. Download Display Driver Uninstaller (DDU) from a safe site.
  2. Download the AMD Adrenalin drivers you want (older version).
  3. Disconnect from the internet (disable Wi-Fi or unplug cable).
  4. Open “Run” with Windows + R, type msconfig, and press Enter.
  5. Go to the Boot tab, check Safe boot, and choose Minimal.
  6. Reboot into Safe Mode.
  7. Run DDU and remove all AMD graphics drivers.
  8. Go to msconfig again and uncheck Safe boot.
  9. Restart into normal mode.
  10. Install the old AMD driver you downloaded.
  11. Restart once more.

Useful Tips

  • After downgrading, you can block Windows from updating to the problem driver again by changing settings in Group Policy Editor (Pro editions) or by using tools like Winaero Tweaker (Home editions).
  • Always download drivers from the official AMD website for safety.
  • Disable internet before uninstalling, so Windows can’t sneak in the broken driver in the background.
  • If your AMD software is missing after installation, you can download AMD Adrenalin separately.

Quick Troubleshooting

  • Still seeing issues? Make sure you installed a driver older than the one causing trouble. Double-check the version number.
  • When in Safe Mode, some features look different—this is normal.
  • Need to know your card’s model? It’s listed in Device Manager under Display adapters.

If a new AMD driver is making your computer act up, going back to an earlier one can fix lots of problems. You can do this with Device Manager, by manually downloading old drivers, or by cleaning everything with DDU. Work step by step and you’ll likely get things running again smoothly—no stress, no worry.

If you run into questions at any step, look at AMD’s official support guides or ask for help in tech communities. Your PC can feel better again, and you’ll be back to fun and productivity.