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Bootcamp AMD Radeon Pro 580X update for Star Wars Squadrons

Trying to play Star Wars Squadrons, I'm running Windows 10 with Mac Bootcamp on a 2019 iMac 27" 5K Retina, i9-9900K with 128 GB RAM and a AMD Radeon Pro 580X. I'm getting an error that the

driver needs to be updated from 19.30.1 to 19.50.29 or later. I've tried this using the available AMD drives for Bootcamp, but it's still not enough. The standard AMD tools don't detect the devices under Bootcamp.


Update AMD graphics drivers for Windows in Boot Camp: https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT208908


Apple Boot Camp Software Graphics Drivers: https://www.amd.com/en/support/kb/release-notes/apple-boot-camp


iMac (Retina 5K, 27-inch, 2014-2019)

    • Boot Camp Unified Driver R3 for Windows 10
    • Display Driver
    • AMD Radeon Settings
    • 19.30 515MB 3/23/2020

iMac Line (2012 and Later)

Posted on Oct 5, 2020 5:48 AM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Oct 6, 2020 10:46 AM

FIXED - Star Wars Squadrons using AMD Pro 580X in Bootcamp


Let me preface this, It worked for me.


You have to force Windows to accept the driver by doing manually through driver properties. This is a very old-school Windows

update method that unless you used Windows 3.11, you’re probably not aware of it. And yes, it’s still in Windows 10.


This may cause your monitor to not work! Again, it worked

for me.


I have a 2019 27” iMac 5K with an i9-9900K, 128GB RAM, and an AMD Radeon 580X. I’m running Windows 10 Pro with the latest Bootcamp drivers, which brings the AMD driver up to the dreaded 19.30.2.


Step 0:


Know how to take Bootcamp into Safe Mode and test it, this is how you back yourself out of things. And make a restore point with Windows.


Step 1:


Download & install the latest drivers from AMD by working your way through the driver menu. Keep looking for Radeon RX 500X Series (Yes, it exists). Once you do find it, underneath is the 580X, but here’s the link.


https://www.amd.com/en/support/graphics/radeon-500-series/radeon-rx-500x-series/radeon-rx-580x


WARNING: All screen captures are from a Windows 10 VM, not Bootcamp. This made it simpler to write this up.


Step 2:


Let it install and error out, the installer actually isn’t needed, but you do need the drivers it does unload. Now go search for the actual drivers.


C:\AMD\Win10-Radeon-Software-Adrenalin-2020-Edition-20.9.2-Sep29\Packages\Drivers\Display\WT6A_INF


You want the INF file with a “C” at the beginning.


Step 3:


Go to Device Manager, Display Adapters. It should already say Radeon 580X (Ignore the Parallels driver in the image). Right click it, go to Update Drivers, and select “Let me pick from a list…”



Step 4:


And here’s the old school part, select “Have Disk”. You’ll see it defaults to the A: drive, just like with Windows 3.11 did with floppies.

Select that and browse to where the driver is and select the INF file starting with a “C”.


C:\AMD\Win10-Radeon-Software-Adrenalin-2020-Edition-20.9.2-Sep29\Packages\Drivers\Display\WT6A_INF


 



Step 5:


This is the tedious part. With Windows 3.11, there weren’t that many devices to select from, but now there are hundreds. Keep scrolling through until you find Radeon RX 580 Graphics. This one is different than the one I did last night; I used the Radeon 500 Series one. I’m going to try that one later.

 


Step 6:


Start playing. So far, everything was pretty stable except for there was no way to see what controls were mapped to the controller or properly change them. Yes, I’m sure there is a way buried in the menu somewhere, but it wasn’t apparent at all. I’m seeing a lot of complaints online about issues with controllers.


 

Again, this worked for me. It might not do the same for you, so create a restore point and know how to get into Safe Mode to unwind the changes.

Similar questions

10 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Oct 6, 2020 10:46 AM in response to rogerfromtucker

FIXED - Star Wars Squadrons using AMD Pro 580X in Bootcamp


Let me preface this, It worked for me.


You have to force Windows to accept the driver by doing manually through driver properties. This is a very old-school Windows

update method that unless you used Windows 3.11, you’re probably not aware of it. And yes, it’s still in Windows 10.


This may cause your monitor to not work! Again, it worked

for me.


I have a 2019 27” iMac 5K with an i9-9900K, 128GB RAM, and an AMD Radeon 580X. I’m running Windows 10 Pro with the latest Bootcamp drivers, which brings the AMD driver up to the dreaded 19.30.2.


Step 0:


Know how to take Bootcamp into Safe Mode and test it, this is how you back yourself out of things. And make a restore point with Windows.


Step 1:


Download & install the latest drivers from AMD by working your way through the driver menu. Keep looking for Radeon RX 500X Series (Yes, it exists). Once you do find it, underneath is the 580X, but here’s the link.


https://www.amd.com/en/support/graphics/radeon-500-series/radeon-rx-500x-series/radeon-rx-580x


WARNING: All screen captures are from a Windows 10 VM, not Bootcamp. This made it simpler to write this up.


Step 2:


Let it install and error out, the installer actually isn’t needed, but you do need the drivers it does unload. Now go search for the actual drivers.


C:\AMD\Win10-Radeon-Software-Adrenalin-2020-Edition-20.9.2-Sep29\Packages\Drivers\Display\WT6A_INF


You want the INF file with a “C” at the beginning.


Step 3:


Go to Device Manager, Display Adapters. It should already say Radeon 580X (Ignore the Parallels driver in the image). Right click it, go to Update Drivers, and select “Let me pick from a list…”



Step 4:


And here’s the old school part, select “Have Disk”. You’ll see it defaults to the A: drive, just like with Windows 3.11 did with floppies.

Select that and browse to where the driver is and select the INF file starting with a “C”.


C:\AMD\Win10-Radeon-Software-Adrenalin-2020-Edition-20.9.2-Sep29\Packages\Drivers\Display\WT6A_INF


 



Step 5:


This is the tedious part. With Windows 3.11, there weren’t that many devices to select from, but now there are hundreds. Keep scrolling through until you find Radeon RX 580 Graphics. This one is different than the one I did last night; I used the Radeon 500 Series one. I’m going to try that one later.

 


Step 6:


Start playing. So far, everything was pretty stable except for there was no way to see what controls were mapped to the controller or properly change them. Yes, I’m sure there is a way buried in the menu somewhere, but it wasn’t apparent at all. I’m seeing a lot of complaints online about issues with controllers.


 

Again, this worked for me. It might not do the same for you, so create a restore point and know how to get into Safe Mode to unwind the changes.

Oct 5, 2020 9:21 AM in response to rogerfromtucker

I have the same issue - it seems Apple and AMD need to update their drivers for the Apple AMD cards (you can only download those drivers from the AMD website - the other more recent drivers won't recognise your hardware. So the only solution is to beg/pester Apple to update their AMD drivers.


One other solution, which I tried (and it works), is to go to www.bootcampdrivers.com and they have the latest AMD drivers for October which work specifically for Apple BootCamp, but this is not supported by Apple. So try at your own risk. It worked for me, and I played the game...but I later uninstalled and went back to the official Apple drivers and want to keep my system stable… but Squadrons doesn't work again in BootCamp.

Bootcamp AMD Radeon Pro 580X update for Star Wars Squadrons

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