How to force Blue Screen Of Death in Windows 10

 

Stop Errors – most commonly known as the Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) signifies fatal system error and it is displayed on the Windows system after a system crash. The error message is prompted on the blue screen when the operating system reaches a level wherein it can no longer function safely. Hence the name Blue Screen of Death.

The BSOD error is mostly displayed when your system is unable to recover the kernel-level error and usually occurs because of several reasons like bad drivers, corrupted windows registries misconfigures device drivers, corrupted files, outdated driver and system hardware issues. Once you come across BSOD, your system would require you to reboot the system in order to continue to operate. While we most often search for various solutions to troubleshoot these blue screen errors and fix the problems, there are some rare times wherein you may be required to force a Windows Blue Screen Of Death error.

That being said, when your system crashes with Blue Screen error, the system basically creates minidump files and all the memory data with the error details is dumped to a hard drive for future debugging. These minidump files created by the forced blue screen of death can be used for testing your system, testing your recovery tool or testing the capabilities of application’s resiliency and remote management.

In this article, we explain how to force a Blue Screen error on your Windows PC using a Keyboard with a Scroll Lock Key and tweaking some values in Registry. But before proceeding, it is recommended that you save all your important files before initiating system crash as once you come across BSOD, the only way to recover back is by rebooting your computer.

Force Blue Screen Of Death in Windows

Before proceeding, ensure that you make a full back up of the registry before modifying the Windows Registry.

Open the Run command. Type Regedit and click Ok to open the registry

Navigate to the following path if you are using a USB keyboard:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetServiceskbdhidParameters

If you are using a PS2 keyboard, browse to the following path:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetservicesi8042prtParameters

If you are not sure which keyboard type you have, don’t worry! You can find out which keyboard you are using by having a close look at the plug connector that connects to the PC. If the plug connector is round shaped then it is a PS2 keyboard, else if it is a rectangular shaped plug connector, then it is a USB keyboard.

Right-click anywhere on the registry window and click on New from the menu. Now click on DWORD (32-bit ) value.

How to force Blue Screen Of Death in Windows 10

Type the name of the DWORD as CrashOnCtrlScroll and click Enter.

Double click on newly created CrashOnCtrlScroll DWORD and change the value data from 0 to 1.

How to force Blue Screen Of Death in Windows 10

Click Ok and Restart the system to apply the changes.

After a restart, you can force a blue screen by holding the right farthest Ctrl Key and pressing the Scroll Lock key twice. Once done, the system triggers KeBugCheck to generate a 0xE2 error, and a blue screen pops up with a message as Manullay_INITIATED_CRASH. The BSOD creates a dump file that will be stored on the system which can be used later for troubleshooting purpose and fixing the problems.

You can revert the changes when you no longer need to force the blue screen. In case of USB keyboard, navigate to the following path:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetServiceskbdhidParameters

Right click on CrashOnCtrlScroll DWORD and choose Delete from the drop-down menu.

How to force Blue Screen Of Death in Windows 10

If you are using a PS2 keyboard, browse the following path:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetservicesi8042prtParameters

Right-click on CrashOnCtrlScroll DWORD and choose Delete from the drop-down menu.

Trust this works for you!

Original Article