Graphical distortion when installing Kali Linux

As far as I understand, this problem is extremely rare; nevertheless, it does exist. The essence of the issue is that when I install the latest version of Kali Linux, I end up with this (see the image). This is the only and main problem. If I press Enter, I can see that the image partially changes, which means that the installation of Kali Linux is proceeding normally, except for the graphics, which are unreadable.

After doing some research online, I found information that some distributions (and Kali Linux seems to be no exception) have a “safe graphics” mode. However, I couldn’t find anywhere what this function is and how to disable it. Perhaps I need to press some key combination or disable a certain parameter in the BIOS (my motherboard is from Asus). I suspect that this problem might have arisen because yesterday, when booting Kali Linux (at that time it was installed on my system), I selected “safe mode” in the boot menu. I never thought that this would cause me so many problems.

When I encountered this issue, I immediately thought that it was due to an incorrect boot process, even though there were no interruptions during the boot, and I downloaded the distribution from the official website. After formatting the flash drive three times for Kali Linux, I began to realize that the problem might not be with a corrupted download, but with my PC or the Ventoy program. Although the graphics in the Ventoy program are excellent and readable (compared to the Kali Linux installation menu), there are no distortions in the BIOS either. So, I decided to connect the flash drive to my friend’s laptop, and incredibly, everything displays perfectly from a graphical standpoint on his device. I found myself at a dead end, as this meant that all the images I had used were correct, as was the Ventoy program itself.

If anyone knows what this could be and how to solve this problem (preferably in the simplest and most effective way, without connecting an external monitor, etc.), please respond. You would really help me out.

that’s your graphics hardware needing drivers, at the boot screen, choose the failsafe option to install, it should later see your graphics hardware and install correct drivers further along in the process.

safe mode loads without most hardware support, really basic, and is used when all you really need is a terminal to fix things.