- Feb 28, 2021
- 677
- 395
My computer is 13 years old. I'm sure that accounts for something.Your computer must be absolutely terrible then, because I run the game on an off-the-shelf basic laptop that's at least a few years old and I've never had a single problem running it. It's not really a resource- or memory-intensive game.
I've never tried compressed versions before. I'll give it a shot.Did you try the compressed version? Those can be less taxing on older systems. If you can't get a Ren'Py game running, then you won't have much luck with many games, because there are engines that require far higher specs to run.
yea i'd buy used ~7 years old computer in your case.My computer is 13 years old. I'm sure that accounts for something.
Robwoodyea i'd buy used ~7 years old computer in your case.
13 years old so agp quite likely or intel hd graphics x000 and not much memory on card.If it is that old I would bet that the video card wont handle the resolution of these games.... If you have a traceback.txt file, and if the last line is " 'SWDraw' object has no attribute 'scale_fast' " I bet that is the case........
What I did was a few years ago my PC was getting up there and I couldn't afford a lot, so I planned out what I wanted to buy, then I saved money each month and bought a new system one part at a time. Started with a new case and motherboard, then a month or two later, grabbed other parts like a video card, hard drive etc... took me nine months as I am not rolling in cash, but I managed to put together a nice upgrade with a video card that was okay. I then spent a year saving for a better video card, only $100 a month, but time flies and I managed to get something decent.My computer is 13 years old. I'm sure that accounts for something.
He could grab a cheap, used video card that would probably fix his problems. Even a low end card would be enough as he just needs to be able to handle 1080P with some basic, modern hardware acceleration etc... NVidia's cheapest cards, while not the fastest at 3D, are fine for gaming like this and would be an upgrade on the cheap.If it is that old I would bet that the video card wont handle the resolution of these games.... If you have a traceback.txt file, and if the last line is " 'SWDraw' object has no attribute 'scale_fast' " I bet that is the case........
Yeah 2009 (13 years ago) was still PCI-express graphics
But it could be integrated graphics which were dog shit
What I haven't seen anybody ask, and I will - are you still using a 32-bit version of the operating system? I've worked with a lot of hardware that old (and more), and the biggest problem is people running ancient 32-bit installs when most RenPy games have since moved to 64-bit. Even if it's not the core game code itself, it could be the memory addressing limitations caused in 32-bit operating systems.My computer is 13 years old. I'm sure that accounts for something.
Shit I still have a working XP-Pro working Shit machine compared to the i-9 G11 but still has a purpose, and use....They still are. Amazing a computer lasted 13 years. First modern one I got was in late 2004. I'm on my fourth now and all of the previous the motherboard went. This one from June 2019.
It's probably the issue Robwood is having. I don't think a lot of computers run a 64 bits OS 13 years ago.What I haven't seen anybody ask, and I will - are you still using a 32-bit version of the operating system? I've worked with a lot of hardware that old (and more), and the biggest problem is people running ancient 32-bit installs when most RenPy games have since moved to 64-bit. Even if it's not the core game code itself, it could be the memory addressing limitations caused in 32-bit operating systems.
new content yes.Is just bug fix in this update? Any new content?
Yes. I am almost certain that is the issue. Even a potato should run Renpy just fine. It is very low in resources.It's probably the issue Robwood is having. I don't think a lot of computers run a 64 bits OS 13 years ago.
recreation didn't release a 32 bits version.
I think I read something about that some pages ago in this thread, and how to make the game working on 32 bits OS.
But I don't remember the solution, as I run a 64 bits Windows 10, and therefore didn't need it...
Seem to have been some good years for long-lasting hardware. Built my old PC in 2012 and just gave it a complete facelift a few months ago because I can work from home now thanks to Covid and 16 GB ram wasn't cutting it for that anymore.They still are. Amazing a computer lasted 13 years. First modern one I got was in late 2004. I'm on my fourth now and all of the previous the motherboard went. This one from June 2019.
You can do quite a bit to prop up older PCs, to be sure. I gifted my 2nd to last PC to a friend. i7-970 chip, buffed it up with 24GB memory, put an NVMe slot adapter in it(with 1TB drive) and a USB 3 adapter card. Polished it off with my now-retired 2080 GTX card. After that I put in Win10 Enterprise and she's off to the races, having a great time. It's vastly out-performing her laptop that she bought only 3-4 years ago (probably mostly due to the expanded RAM, honestly).Seem to have been some good years for long-lasting hardware. Build my old PC in 2012 and just gave it a complete facelift a few months ago because I can work from home now thanks to Covid and 16 GB ram wasn't cutting it for that anymore.
Sure, newer games didn't run on higher settings anymore on my GTX 670, but they still looked so much better than a decade ago when it was just a blurry mess on those lower settings.
Regarding the graphics card - really depends on what kind of power you need.They said at Best Buy once the motherboard goes, replacing it is almost as expensive as buying a new computer - and the new one will be faster, etc. Of course they all come with those stupid integrated graphics chips, never a real graphics card unless you can afford thousands of dollars.