Sometimes VLC tries to use your graphics card to decode the video, but the driver or hardware doesn't support that specific profile, causing it to fail completely . Go to > Preferences (Ctrl+P) . Select the Input / Codecs tab .
While this is technically a workaround rather than a fix for VLC, it stabilizes the Windows DirectShow system. Sometimes VLC tries to use your graphics card
Your video file is using a highly compressed, modern version of the H.264 codec that your current version of VLC is struggling to initialize. While this is technically a workaround rather than
Delete the file and find another copy. Not every video is salvageable. Not every video is salvageable
Open VLC. Step 2: Go to Tools > Preferences (or press Ctrl + P on Windows, Cmd + , on Mac). Step 3: In the bottom-left corner, click "Show settings" and select "All" (Advanced view). Step 4: In the left sidebar, navigate to: Input / Codecs > Video codecs > FFmpeg . Step 5: Find the option labeled: "Hardware decoding" . Step 6: Change it from "Automatic" or "DXVA 2.0" to "Disabled" . Step 7: Click Save and restart VLC completely.
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