How to Fix the Fatal D3D Error (25) in Resident Evil 4 Remake?

One of the best-selling games of Capcom, Resident Evil 4 Remake is the remastered version of the hit 2005 game. Players step in the shoes of US agent Leon S.

Kennedy, who is tasked with the mission of saving the President’s daughter from the Los Illuminados Cult. The remake has better graphics and visuals, altered third-person gameplay, and an updated plot with DLC content occasionally chipped in.

Compared to the original, which took 15 GB of Hard Drive space, the RE 4 Remake needs almost 70 GB space.

NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1050 Ti or Radeon RX 560 are the recommended Graphics Processing Units (GPU). An outdated GPU could be problematic, leading to the Fatal D3D Error, but other system-related issues could be responsible too.

 fatal d3d error 25 resident evil 4 remake
Image via CAPCOM

What is Resident Evil 4 Remake’s Fatal D3D Error?

A frequently reported issue in Resident Evil 4 Remake is the Fatal D3D Error. The game becomes unresponsive, crashes, or gets stuck on the loading screen. When the error message pops up on the PC screen, it looks something like this:-

The engine usually runs into the Fatal Application Exit error in the RE4 Remake due to the GPU and lack of VRAM. An inefficient graphics driver or video RAM may crash the game if it’s played with the best settings, exceeding the capabilities of a computer. There’s also the chance that the game files have been corrupted.

It has been over two months since the last update for Resident Evil 4 Remake. Players are often encountering the Fatal D3D Error to this day. A set of elaborate procedures on PC are required to get the game back on track.

5 ways to fix the Fatal D3D Error (25) in Resident Evil 4 Remake?

Fixing the Fatal Application Exit situation is a process of Trial-and-Error. Gamers need to identify the root cause of the problem and act then on it. Below is a list of methods that could solve Resident Evil 4 Remake’s Fatal D3D error:-

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Update or Adjust the GPU

Updating the graphics card is simple. Go to the Device Manager —> right-click on the GPU installed, such as NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 Ti, then left-click on Update driver. To adjust the graphics, go to System –> Display —> Graphics —> Resident Evil 4 Remake. Then go to ‘Options’ and choose the Graphics preference based on the VRAM and processor. Restart the computer to implement changes.

Disable Raytracing

Resident Evil 4 Remake’s Fatal D3D Error could be caused by Raytracing as it strains the GPU by blowing through the VRAM budget, an issue that has been reported in the 3070 and 3080 Ti versions. Turn off RT from RE 4’s Graphic settings.

End background processes

Applications running in the background could hinder the gameplay experience. Try terminating any background processes to fix the D3D issue. GPU Afterburners could also cause crashes in the game. To close the program, go to Settings and choose the Afterburner. Click on the gear icon in the upper right corner, thereby opening the settings menu, and then click on the “Exit” button.

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Reduce Texture Quality and other in-game settings

To decrease the toll taken by the VRAM, reduce texture quality to try and solve the Fatal D3D issue in Resident Evil 4 Remake. Launch the game and then go to Option. Navigate to Graphic Settings, which is in the middle of the panel, and scroll down to check and reduce Texture Quality. Frame Rate, Screen Resolution, and Display Mode could also be changed to fix Error 25.

Look for corrupted or missing files

Some files could be either corrupted or missing even after a successful installation of a game or an update, Verify the integrity of the Resident Evil 4 Remake game files by navigating to the Game Library on Steam. Right click RE4 —> Properties —> Local Files and then click the Verify tab.

Steam user genowhirl15 encountered the same issue:-

“I’ll chime in on this. I’ve experienced 2 instances of the game freezing until I reset it, and 1 instance of this Fatal Error message. I eventually verified my files on Steam and something was missing right out of the gate, and so Steam began patching the missing file back in.”