Nvidia pulls Resident Evil Requiem Game Ready driver over fan control issues

Daniel Sims

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Facepalm: Nvidia graphics card users experiencing fan control issues after updating to driver version 595.59 WHQL should roll back to version 591.86. Nvidia has acknowledged the issue and removed the update pending an investigation. The incident, which occurred alongside the launch of one of the biggest Nvidia-sponsored PC games of 2026, drew accusations of vibe coding from frustrated users.

After Nvidia launched the February 2026 Game Ready and Studio Driver, which includes optimizations for Resident Evil Requiem and the Marathon server slam, users complained that some fans on RTX GPUs would not turn on, raising the risk of overheating. Some noted that their cards began ignoring custom fan protocols from apps such as MSI Afterburner. Most complaints came from owners of RTX 50 series cards, but problems with models from older generations also emerged.

Users experiencing issues can roll back the update within the Nvidia app, manually search for drivers on Nvidia's website, or download version 591.86 from TechSpot. Many also recommend first running Display Driver Uninstaller, which completely uninstalls GPU drivers to ensure safe, clean driver updates.

The incident is particularly embarrassing for Nvidia because Resident Evil Requiem, which celebrates the 30th anniversary of the franchise that popularized horror video games, is the company's latest sponsored title. It supports ray tracing, path tracing, DLSS 4, multi-frame generation, and ray reconstruction. Nvidia bundled the game with most RTX graphics cards sold before March 16, and released several trailers showcasing the impact of DLSS and RTX technology on Requiem's visuals.

However, withdrawing the Resident Evil Requiem Game Ready driver will force Nvidia users to play the game on January's driver, possibly leading to a performance penalty. AMD also released its driver for Resident Evil Requiem and Marathon this week, with no major issues reported.

Capcom's survival horror game isn't just a crucial showcase for RTX GPUs; it is also quickly becoming one of 2026's first blockbuster hits. Within minutes of its launch at midnight ET on February 26, it blew past the franchise's all-time peak player count on Steam. As of this writing, Resident Evil Requiem is currently Steam's top-selling game and its third-most played title behind Dota 2 and Counter-Strike 2. Nvidia is likely facing significant pressure to issue a driver hotfix as excitement for Capcom's latest game peaks over the weekend.

Complaints over the driver also included accusations that the problem stems from Nvidia's purported heavy reliance on AI for software development. Although there is no direct evidence that Game Ready Driver 595.59 – or any other Nvidia driver – was vibe coded, the company has made no secret of its bullishness about AI coding.

Nvidia GPUs have been the primary engine behind the ongoing AI boom, and CEO Jensen Huang admitted that he told employees to automate as many tasks as possible with AI late last year. Furthermore, earlier this month, AI tool Cursor stated that Nvidia has tripled its code commits since adopting AI, and that 30,000 of the company's engineers use Cursor daily. Last fall, Huang claimed that all of Nvidia's employees use at least one AI tool.

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Vibe coding a driver, probably. Yup, AI is coming taking your job but it can't even properly write commands for a fan controller. I see so much of the AI confidence coming from people who sound like they have a superiority complex and don't actually work. It would be one thing if everywhere we looked AI was doing a better job than humans. Thing is, nearly everywhere you look, AI is doing an awful job and the investors just laugh "just you wait! we just need bigger data centers and more data" then proceed to turn up the money furnaces. Do you know who might know if AI is capable of taking someone's job? The people doing the actual job.
 
What is even more worrisome than the driver bug is that it wasn't caught in testing. A fan control issue should have been detected acoustically and also by monitoring the GPUs temperature. I assume they are using AI regression testing too. Problems like this will continue if they don't have enough humans in the loop on software development, testing, and product system regression testing.
 
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So much for testing before releasing a driver or product.

Seems it's lost art of double checking everything is working before releasing it.

That means this had to go through how many people and got signed of without anyone of them doing their jobs... Crazy someone need to get a good hiding for this.
 
Nvidia doesn't care about you PC Peasant Race clowns anymore now that AI will make them a trillion dollars a year.

It's too bad AMD and Intel don't care about you either.
 
So much for Nvidia being the company known for their stable drivers. Not the first case of messed up nvidia drivers in recent years and I'm sure it'll become more common as vibe coding the drivers is pushed more and more.
 
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