Fake Blue Screen of Death (BSOD)

A pixel-perfect replica of the Windows Blue Screen of Death with the :( sad face, QR code, stop code, and live percentage counter. Make your friends think their PC just crashed — runs entirely in the browser, no download required.

100% Safe No Install Instant
:(
Your PC ran into a problem
and needs to restart.

More Fake Update Screens

What Is the Fake Blue Screen of Death?

The fake Blue Screen of Death is a browser-based prank that displays a fullscreen replica of the real Windows BSOD error screen. It shows the same 🙁 sad face emoticon, “Your PC ran into a problem” message, QR code, percentage counter, and CRITICAL_PROCESS_DIED stop code that appears when Windows encounters a fatal system error.

The prank runs entirely in your web browser using HTML, CSS, and JavaScript. Nothing crashes, nothing is installed, and no system files are modified. Closing the browser tab ends the prank instantly.

How to Use the Fake BSOD

Using the fake Blue Screen of Death takes three steps:

  1. Click the Start button at the top of this page. Your browser will enter fullscreen mode automatically.
  2. Walk away from the PC. The percentage counter slowly climbs on its own, making it look like Windows is collecting error information before a restart.
  3. Press ESC to exit when you are ready to end the prank. You can also move the mouse to reveal the exit button in the top-right corner.

For the most convincing result, press F11 to ensure the browser is in fullscreen mode before stepping away. The fake BSOD looks most realistic on a Windows PC where the victim expects to see a Blue Screen.

Is the Fake BSOD Safe?

Yes. The fake Blue Screen of Death is a standard web page that uses the same technologies as every other website on the internet. It cannot crash your operating system, damage hardware, install software, change settings, access files, or affect other devices on the network.

Your operating system continues running normally behind the fullscreen browser window. Antivirus software will not flag it because there is nothing malicious about it.

What Does the Real Windows BSOD Look Like?

The real Windows Blue Screen of Death appears when Windows encounters a fatal system error that it cannot recover from. The modern BSOD (Windows 10 and 11) displays a blue background with a large 🙁 sad face emoticon, a message saying “Your PC ran into a problem and needs to restart,” a percentage counter showing error collection progress, a QR code linking to Microsoft support, and a stop code identifying the specific error.

Our fake BSOD replicates every element of the real screen. The stop code shown is CRITICAL_PROCESS_DIED, one of the most common real Windows stop codes, which makes the prank immediately recognizable to anyone who has experienced a real crash.

BSOD vs Fake Windows Update

The fake BSOD and the fake Windows update are both harmless browser-based pranks, but they create different reactions. The BSOD makes the victim think their computer has crashed and something has gone wrong. The fake Windows update makes the victim think their computer is installing a system update and they need to wait. The BSOD is more alarming and gets a bigger reaction, while the fake update is a slower burn that works best when the victim returns to their desk and thinks they are stuck waiting.

Tips for the Best Prank

  • Use it on a Windows PC. A Blue Screen of Death on a Mac or Chromebook is an instant giveaway. The prank is only convincing on a computer that actually runs Windows.
  • Use fullscreen mode. Press F11 if the browser does not enter fullscreen automatically. The browser chrome (address bar, tabs) ruins the illusion.
  • Hide the mouse cursor. Move the cursor to the edge of the screen after launching so it disappears. The real BSOD has no visible cursor.
  • Time it right. Launch the prank while the PC owner steps away. When they return and see the Blue Screen they will think the computer crashed on its own.
  • Do not overreact. Let the victim discover the screen naturally. The prank is funnier when the reaction is genuine surprise rather than a setup they can see coming.
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, completely safe. The fake BSOD is a simple HTML, CSS, and JavaScript animation that runs entirely inside your web browser. It does not crash your operating system, install software, modify files, or make any changes to your computer. Closing the browser tab ends the prank instantly and leaves your PC exactly as it was.

No. The fake Blue Screen of Death is a visual simulation only. Your operating system continues running normally behind the fullscreen browser window. Nothing is being restarted, no drivers are affected, and no system files are modified. It is purely a visual illusion displayed in your browser.

Press the ESC key at any time to instantly exit the prank and return to the normal page. You can also move your mouse to reveal an exit button in the top-right corner of the screen. Closing the browser tab also ends the prank immediately.

Very realistic. The screen is a pixel-accurate replica of the real Windows 10 and Windows 11 Blue Screen of Death, including the :( sad face emoticon, the "Your PC ran into a problem" error message, a QR code, a percentage counter that slowly climbs, and the stop code "CRITICAL_PROCESS_DIED" at the bottom. In fullscreen mode on a Windows PC it is nearly indistinguishable from a real crash.

No. The QR code is decorative only and cannot be scanned. On a real Windows BSOD the QR code links to a Microsoft troubleshooting page, but on this prank screen it is a non-functional visual element included purely for realism.

The fake BSOD displays the stop code "CRITICAL_PROCESS_DIED" which is one of the most common real Windows stop codes. This makes the prank more convincing because anyone who has seen a real BSOD will recognize the format and error code.

Yes. The prank runs in any modern web browser on any operating system including Windows, macOS, Linux, and ChromeOS. However, the prank is most convincing on a Windows PC because the victim expects to see a Windows Blue Screen. On a Mac or Chromebook a Windows BSOD looks out of place.

Click the launch button and your browser will automatically enter fullscreen mode using the Fullscreen API. If your browser blocks automatic fullscreen, press F11 on your keyboard for the same result. F11 works in Chrome, Firefox, Edge, and all major browsers.

A fake BSOD simulates a Windows crash — a blue screen with a sad face and error message that looks like the computer has stopped working. A fake Windows update simulates the "Working on updates" screen that appears during a normal Windows update. Both are harmless browser-based pranks, but the BSOD is more alarming because it looks like something has gone wrong.

No. Because the fake BSOD is a regular web page, antivirus and anti-malware software treats it like any other website. There are no executables, no downloads, no scripts that modify your system, and no suspicious behavior. It is completely safe to use on any computer with antivirus protection.