PC shut down

My pc shut down for no reason , windows logs say error and this

- <Event xmlns=" ">
- <System>
<Provider Name="EventLog" />
<EventID Qualifiers="32768">6008</EventID>
<Level>2</Level>
<Task>0</Task>
<Keywords>0x80000000000000</Keywords>
<TimeCreated SystemTime="2020-02-02T09:59:20.222039100Z" />
<EventRecordID>11546</EventRecordID>
<Channel>System</Channel>
<Computer>DESKTOP-6BVD211</Computer>
<Security />
</System>
- <EventData>
<Data>10:18:06 PM</Data>
<Data>‎2/‎2/‎2020</Data>
<Data />
<Data />
<Data>7211</Data>
<Data />
<Data />
<Binary>E407020000000200160012000600FC00E407020000000200090012000600FC00600900003C000000010000006009000001000000B00400000100000002000000</Binary>
</EventData>
</Event>

can anyone explain what to look for with this
 
Likely HEAT related (for protection). It's rare for me, but it just happened last night @ 96F.
 
Consider possibility of dust build-up needing clean-out and if system over 2 yrs old, you may need to replace thermal paste.
ive got temp programs watching all temps , so theres been no spikes - I ran memtest for 9 hours today, max temp reached was 70c , . I found malwarebytes causing lock ups since last update- so have had to disable that for now too. ive blown out my pc of dust with a compressor so its clean as a whistle inside
 
Details for your system may give insight. Please provide description.

Recent additions of hardware or software?

Does system failure follow certain actions or activity?

No single clear idea as yet. Event ID 6008 is merely a status report ('unexpected shutdown'). 70C temp on your CPU may be above design limit - some CPUs fail at that temp. High ambient temps may be contributing to the problem. Confirm proper operation of fans and consider replacing thermal paste if last done over 2 yrs ago.

Issues with Malwarebytes may be a sign of malware or registry corruption (which can be caused by 'unexpected shutdown').

Please run "Reliability Monitor" (Control Panel\All Control Panel Items\Security and Maintenance\Reliability Monitor). Examine detail for each 'critical event', 'failure' and 'warning' .
 
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