While you have a right to be pissed off this is a public forum which translates more into community members helping and not UBI personnel so my suggestion is... give us more info and you will get quicker and better answers
if you have images that will be best... are you on PC, Xbox, PS, have u patched the game to the latest?
View the tech forum for your platform, which most likely is a PC.Originally Posted by ddiniraq Go to original post
If so, the encountered problem apparently is caused by the specific graphic card installed.
There's multiple posts on the specific problem mentioned.
No problems with any other games, Running an I9-9900K with a RTX 2080 and NVME m.2 SSD ,plenty of top end RAM etc. Def not my rig, it can handle any game out there on ultra settings all day long... I did find through trial and error that if I take Ubisoft online out of the picture ie turn off my 500 Mbps internet connection I don't suffer this issue.. I searched key phrase "crashing weapons inventory" and found nothing in UBI's forums but quite a bit mentioned online in general.. It appears to be on UBI's end with their sync IDK, Thanks for the input though.. I sent every crash report as it happened as well as reported it to UBI, I was hoping to see what others did to remedy this ...
THIS WORKED FOR ME...
Thank you for contacting Ubisoft Customer Support.
In order to fully troubleshoot the problem that you are having, please try the steps below:
1. Disabling your background applications:
Go to the Start menu on your Desktop. Press the Windows key and the letter R at the same time.
Type in MSCONFIG and press Enter.
Go to the Startup tab, and click Open Task Manager.
For each Startup item in the Task Manager, select the item then click Disable.
Close Task Manager.
On the Startup tab of the System Configuration dialog box, click OK, then restart the computer.
Note: For Windows 7, you can simply click Disable All on the Startup tab within the System Configuration window.
2. Clearing your temporary files:
Go to the Start menu on your Desktop. Press the Windows key and the letter R at the same time.
Type in %TEMP% and press Enter.
Select All (Edit > Select All or Ctrl+A).
Click the Delete key.
Note: If you are using Windows 7, you will need to press Ctrl + A together to highlight the files. Once the files are highlighted, you will need to press the Delete key.
3. Make sure the drivers for your video card, sound card, motherboard and processor are up-to-date. Running 2 cards in SLI or running 2 screens can also cause issues. Deactivate SLI or unplug any additional screens you may be using. If you are overclocking, try running at the stock clock settings.
4. Make sure that any antivirus or firewall software on your system is disabled.
5. Install Windows Updates:
Click on the Windows Start button and go to All Programs --> Windows Update. In the left pane, click "Check for updates" and if any are found choose "Install updates."
http://windows.microsoft.com/en-us/w...indows-updates