A “Do you want to continue?” popup will appear.The other options give you enough time to see if Avast is what’s causing BlueStacks’ error) (Again, DO NOT choose “Disable permanently.” This will leave your PC vulnerable to threats and attacks. Select either the “Disable for 10 minutes” or “Disable for 1 hour” option. Move your mouse to “Avast Shields control” in the drop-down menu.Start by right-clicking on the Avast icon in the Windows system tray.REMINDER: You’re disabling it for a short time to check if BlueStacks works in that period. Do this by clicking on “Engine” and going to “CPU and RAM allocation.” Move the slider to up to the Recommended Memory (which will be to the top right over the slider) if it isn’t already defaulted there. You should also check to see if the RAM allocation is. Following this, a “Checking DirectX compatibility” message will appear briefly, followed by a message saying “Restart BlueStacks to boot in DirectX”.Under “Choose graphics mode”, select “DirectX”.In the Settings window, click “Engine” from the vertical left pane of options.Select “Settings” from the drop-down menu.Depending what you’re running, this may look like a cogwheel or an arrow pointing down. Click the options button in the top right corner.Open BlueStacks and ignore the Engine won’t start error message.Switching this to DirectX and rebooting the system will usually solve the problem. BlueStacks automatically has your Graphics Mode selected as OpenGL. One of the simplest and most common problems is your Graphics Mode being on the wrong setting. Most likely, this may not have been your problem, but it’s a very easy fix if the problem arose after you updated your OS.
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