Yes, you can return opened video and PC games, but you can only exchange them for a copy of the exact same game, which was fine with us. Liz had already played the demo and enjoyed it, so we were happy to get a working copy.
We got home, popped in CD#1 (of 3), ran the install, it asked for CD#2, we popped that in...and a corrupt CAB error message came up. WTF? What the hell is this shite? Well the game is produced by
This time I attempted to not burn a copy of the CD, but install it, on my PC, and it worked...WTF? Ok,
I then attempted an install on Liz's PC over our LAN using my PC, and it worked...sort of...despite the fact that in the network neighborhood I could see the shared directory on Liz's PC, and that said directory contained a folder called AoE III, I could see that folder only on my PC. I mean it was on Liz's PC, but I couldn't see it using her PC, I could only see it using my PC. WTF? So Liz calls my bro-in-law to ask him for help, but she calls my bro-in-law by mistake, as in she meant to call my older BIL but called the younger BIL instead. While I was chatting to him I copied the AoE III folder from my PC to Liz's PC over our LAN. Not installed, copied. Liz popped in the CD, and instead of getting an Install prompt, she got a Play prompt. That was good, but another WTF? moment.
So she plays AoE III for a little while, and she's enjoying it...but it's awfully slow...coz she doesn't have a dedicated video card...she has an onboard video card using 64 of her 512Mb of PC2700 DDR Memory, which is enough to run the game...it's enough to run the game. Liz got a little annoyed. Frustrated even. Some might say "Pissed."
I was playing World of Warcraft (as I do every evening) and I don't know what came over me, but I voluntarily gave up my PC so Liz could play her new game. No, she didn't ask me if she could kick me off, I offered my PC to her. She was so pissed at first that she didn't want it, but the desire to actually play the game (not just run it, get the difference?) was too strong, and she agreed.
Tomorrow, we get her a BFG4000 video card...from Best Buy...or maybe I'll see what CompUSA have...although we have a 12% discount coupon at Best Buy...I think BB is gonna get our business...again.
8 comments:
You can allways try DaemonTools in these situations. It allows you to mount an ISO image as a virtual CD/DVD.
www.gamecopyworld.com is also handy for, er, offsite backups, yeh, thats it, offsite backups.
Daemon tools is for hobos and lesbians, use alcohol 120% for virtual drives.
gamecopyworld.com is for nocd patches mainly, which are perfectly legal to use btw; it means also liz's game/s will run faster and she wont have to use cd1 or the play cd.
Whoever ran off the discs for AOEIII probably pushed their luck splitting it all up, the cd's must have a high error rate and some cd/dvd players [like liz's] just will not read/install em properly.
You can legally make one backup up of your own games / music in the states, you can get a patch to make AOEIII into a single DVD.
What make/model is liz's computer? i ask, cause if she has a good cpu 30$ diff on what you plan to already spend can make a shitload of difference.
The CPU is an AMD Sempron 2300+
I know about Gamecopyworld but didn't think to use it. Might be a good idea, especially if it means Liz's PC doesn't have to read the CDs during gameplay.
If her CD drive had trouble reading them during the install, she may run into a read error problem during gameplay as well.
I think a visit to gamecopyworld.com might be in order.
I'm not trying to hack the game, I'm just trying to overcome MS's cheap burn process that resulted in CDs which can't be read on all machines.
I have a friend who works for MS, I might let him know, not that he can do anything, but he might be able to get a note to someone...not that MS probably cares.
Well with that cpu i guess you prolly go for the $70 card then.I use GCW alot; all your really doing is downloaidng a modified .exe file that has the "check for cd" line removed, this doesnt affect the serial number of the game nor does it affect online play in any way, even my legal games [all 2 of them] use no cd patches.
Just a quick hint for using nocd patches:
browse to whatever game folder [in your case AOEIII] and rename the .exe file to .old - reason being that every time the game version gets updated you need a new nocd, this way the orginal .exe and updated versions wont get overwritten, just check the latest nocd version of the game before you update it's version.
oh yeah and:
M$ as shit as they are dont handle the pressing and printing of their games, some 3rd party does the mastering. the game would literally have to fail in one outta five brands of drives before it would be recalled and re pressed.You could go to the maunfacturere.. manufacturers? fuck it, the company that owns liz's drive and see if theres a firmware update for it - that sometimes helps with pissy media be it reading or wrting.
Happy to finally know I'm a hobo or a lesbian, you ***t :-)
alcohol 120% is of course commerical, verses legit no-pay for DaemonTools, so try em both.
Nah just steal alcohol 120% off the internet like everyone else.. why settle for second best? And before anyone gets into a "thats stealing" debate.. youve all downloaded music illegally at some point so unless youve never broken any digital copyright law.. hush the fuck up.
wait.. my names ross not anonymous.. well anyways i wrote the above.. so neh.
Post a Comment