Hi,
Using an up-to-date Windows 10 Home with all firewalls and virus protection turned off. Running the latest VLC, 3.0.18, on a lenovo legion desktop with 1TB SSD system drive, 32 GB ram, i7 processor, Nvidia RTX graphics card, an internal cd-rom drive, and external usb Pioneer BDR-XD07S bluray/dvd/cd drive.
VLC will no longer play a number of the dvd's it's played with no trouble in recent months, on either the internal cd-rom, or the external bdr. Now it just locks up when attempting to load. The dvds are not damaged. Also, a brand new dvd, that's been tested on other computers, sometimes does start, but glitches badly and finally locks up in 20-30 seconds. Sometimes the disk identifying info shows up in the Open Media window, and it will start to play but quickly crash. Other times nothing in that window, and I either get a no-disk msg or similar, and VLC hangs. Have to use Task Manager to get unlocked.
Very strangely, but maybe helpful troubleshooting-wise, Windows 10 says this is a blank disk. It isn't of course. VLC has loaded and played it for a few second several times before locking up. Perhaps the answer is in there somewhere. Because VLC does recognize and read it sporadically, while Windows insists it's just a totally blank disk, it doesn't seem like a strictly VLC, or stricly Windows 10 problem. It seems like a combination of the two.
I'm not a tech person. In the old days, I'd have figured a corrupted codec or something like that. But VLC isn't supposed to need codec packs, and my VLC install is recent. I'd assume a bad player, but of the two I have, the problem occurs on both drives. I did try a player firmware update, but it had no effect.And I did try a driver update, but Windows said it's already up to date. Same for Lenovo. It's a this-year Windows 10 Home installation, fully updated.
The Windows 10 troubleshooting, and the lenovo troubleshooting, both say there are no hardware or communication problems. Windows 10 Defender is up to date and finds no malware or virus. To all appearances, there is nothing wrong, and VLC should be able to play the same dvds it has in the past. For example, a Star Trek dvd that VLC played about a month ago, with no systems changes beyond Windows update since, now won't load at all. It's not a scratched or damaged disk.
Any help would be appreciated.