| Component | Minimum Requirement | |-----------|---------------------| | RAM | 4 GB (8 GB recommended) | | CPU | x86-64 (64-bit) | | GPU | OpenGL 4.3 compatible graphics card |

It sounds like you’re looking for for Windows 10 64-bit .

To get , you don't actually download a standalone "OpenGL installer." Instead, OpenGL is a standard that comes bundled with your graphics card drivers. To update to version 4.3, you must ensure your hardware supports it and then install the latest drivers from your GPU manufacturer. Step 1: Check if Your Hardware Supports OpenGL 4.3

Before downloading, you must know if you have graphics. Right-click the Start button and select Device Manager . Expand Display adapters .

Some laptops have both integrated GPU (iGPU) and dedicated GPU. Blender may be attempting to use the iGPU, which may not support OpenGL 4.3.

Before attempting to update, ensure your hardware physically supports OpenGL 4.3. Almost all modern graphics processors support this version, but legacy hardware may be capped at lower versions. Hardware Generation Requirements:

Check the . It should read 4.3 or higher (e.g., 4.5 or 4.6 ). Because OpenGL is backward compatible, having a higher version like 4.6 means your system fully supports all 4.3 applications. Troubleshooting Common OpenGL Errors on Windows 10

The or application you are trying to run Your current driver version if known Share public link

OpenGL 4.3 introduced critical features like compute shaders. If a game requires it, older driver versions will cause the application to crash.

If you have encountered an error message like while launching Blender, nTop, or a modern game, you are not alone. This article provides a comprehensive, step-by-step guide to downloading and installing OpenGL 4.3 on Windows 10 64-bit.