
Intel’s Raptor Lake bug exposed by Europe’s heatwave, Mozilla reports crash surge
Intel’s lingering Raptor Lake bug is rearing its head once again—and this time, Europe’s punishing summer temperatures are putting it under a new spotlight. According to Mozilla engineer Gabriele Svelto, the ongoing heatwave is correlating with a spike in system crashes among users with Intel’s 13th- and 14th-gen desktop processors. While the hardware flaw has been known since early 2024, the heat is now acting as a stressor that pushes these CPUs beyond their safe operating limits—especially for users who haven’t yet applied Intel’s recommended firmware fix.
Svelto shared his findings on Mastodon, saying that crash reports from Firefox users were increasing in sync with the regions experiencing high heat. “I know because I can literally see which EU countries have been affected by heat waves by looking at the locales of Firefox crash reports coming from Raptor Lake systems,” he wrote. Intel’s affected chips suffer from a microcode issue that can cause higher-than-intended voltages, and as temperatures rise, so does system instability—eventually resulting in crashes or long-term degradation.
This wasn’t just a coincidence or a few isolated cases. The volume of crash data coming from these systems was so high that Mozilla’s internal reporting bot had to be manually throttled. On the company’s bug tracker, an engineer noted: “Suhaib deployed a change to bugbot that makes it ignore crashes from this CPU so hopefully we won’t get so many going forward.” The implication: affected systems are now flooding diagnostic systems with crash logs, likely due to a mix of high thermal loads and unpatched firmware.
Intel has previously addressed this issue by offering a mitigation path through BIOS and UEFI updates provided by motherboard manufacturers. These updates lower voltage parameters to stabilize the chip under high load. However, implementation has been uneven—particularly in Europe, where the lack of widespread air conditioning means systems are now operating in far hotter environments than intended. To help users affected by the bug, Intel also extended warranties on Raptor Lake CPUs from three to five years in mid-2024.
From June 23 to July 2, countries like France and Spain faced their most intense heatwave on record, with temperatures well above 104°F (40°C). These extreme conditions have seemingly revealed just how vulnerable desktop PCs can be when thermal safety nets fail. If you’re using a Raptor Lake processor and haven’t patched your BIOS yet, now is the time. Because once these CPUs degrade, there’s no going back.
