Quote Originally Posted by Lucas_Angelini View Post
>My GPU is set to run at stable speed, with its factory overclock removed.
>--This stops Fatal DX11 Error 11000002, but does not appear to affect this error.

Wait, you said it stops the DirectX Error 11000002. How did you do it? And will it work on gaming laptops?
I will try certain other options suggested soon. Trying to disable more Start-ups as there is no standard option(Task Manager is replaced by Process Explorer) for that on this PC, so it comes to disabling their Start-ups via an external program known as Autoruns. This should ensure the Cleanboot is actually clean.

Anyways the method to stop the variation of Fatal DX11 Error 11000002 mentioned was done by using overclocking programs such as MSI Afterburner to set the clockspeed BELOW its unaltered values, down to the stock/factory/reference clocks for the GPU.
You can check if a Fatal DX11 Error 110000002 was GPU clock related by going into Windows Event Viewer(found under Windows Adminstration Tools for Windows 10's start menu), going into Custom Views -> Administrative Events, and seeing if an entry that includes "Display" is listed with the following description:
"Display driver nvlddmkm stopped responding and has successfully recovered."
If such an Event Viewer entry is present at the time of the Fatal DX11 Error 11000002 crash, then the error is GPU/Driver related as a result of clock instability or driver issues.