Vulkan On The OEM Drivers

Yes I noticed there are no specific Chipset Drivers for your laptop. Sometimes laptop manufacturers incorporated the Chipset drivers with the Graphic driver package but that doesn’t seem to be the case for your laptop.

Doesn’t matter. Your laptop probably has the correct Chipset drivers installed.

Install the HP AMD Driver from HP Support and then run GPU-Z and see if Vulkan is check marked at the bottom of the image. If not then use this basic method to remove the current AMD driver from your laptop and to install the new version to prevent any conflicts:

Uninstall the current AMD Driver using DDU as per this method:

It could be due to a corrupted AMD Driver installation.

Download free program DDU (Display Driver Uninstaller). Run it in Safe mode with the internet disconnected.

You can also run it in Windows Desktop but then you would need to Reboot the computer for DDU to finish erasing all of the AMD Driver traces from your computer.

Once it finishes uninstalling the current AMD Driver in Safe mode and boots back to Windows Desktop, still with the Internet disconnected, delete the AMD Installation folder C:\AMD if it was created before.

Now install the full AMD Drive package you downloaded manually from AMD Download page. Not the express package. Run the package and if it installs correctly again delete C:\AMD folder and reconnect the internet.

This should prevent any conflict when installing the new version from the previous version.

By the way, C:\AMD is always created whenever you run the AMD Driver package

After installing the latest AMD driver version for your APU (link in previous reply), run GPU-Z again and check if Vulkan is check marked. It should be if it isn’t then your AMD driver wasn’t installed correctly.