Driver Rollback After an Update: When It Makes Sense
A driver update can fix bugs, but it can also introduce problems. Black screens, audio loss, Wi-Fi dropouts, blue screens or poor gaming performance after an update may point toward driver conflict. Rolling back can help in the right case.
The key is timing. If the problem began immediately after a specific update and the hardware was stable before, driver rollback is worth considering. If the computer was already overheating or freezing, the driver may not be the main cause.
Do not install random packages
Driver download sites can create more problems. Use Windows Update, manufacturer support pages or known hardware vendor sources. For business devices, check whether the manufacturer has a tested driver package.
Before major driver changes, protect work files and create a recovery path if possible.
Symptoms matter by device
Graphics drivers affect displays and games. Wi-Fi drivers affect connection stability. Chipset drivers can affect power, sleep and USB behaviour. Audio drivers can affect microphones and speakers.
AEPC / AKL East PC can diagnose driver-related computer faults in Auckland and separate software conflicts from failing hardware.