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@mxtthxw Have you recently upgraded the kernel? Anyway, maybe booting with the previous one...
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@mxtthxw Sure! If that works for you, then perfect. The new one will have security patches and "improvements" though (that, in your case, lead to a kernel panic).
Knowing that a previous kernel works fine also gives you room to investigate; as someone has said before, sometimes the conflicted kernel can be "fixed" just adding parameters on grub.
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@mxtthxw Just in case you don't know: if you are using Debian stable (I think I've read that in another post from you) you also have the option to use a backported kernel.
They are also offered by Debian (no external sources needed), and they are more up-to-date that the ones in stable, so they could be the solution for your issue.
Worth a try, as you can always go back to the kernel that works :)