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Annoying shenanigans in old PC games.

Krathoon

Member
I was playing around with the PC versions of Assassin's Creed 3 and 1 and it reminded me of the bullcrap that happens with old PC games.

For some reason, AC3 will not run at all anymore in Win11. The solution for this is just to buy the AC3 Remaster for $10.

Also, I ran into a problem with AC1 periodically freezing. It turns out that the game is trying to access a server as you are playing and freezing the game.

The solution to this is to edit a hosts file to block the connection.

So, what kind of bullcrap you have ran into with old PC games?
 

LordOfChaos

Member
Could you not do this?

compatibility-mode.jpg


I think I did this for at least some games, I think Halo 2 that would only launch under Vista or something
 
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More often than not, you can just go on PCGamingWiki and almost always; most common problems are already addressed.

It can be annoying, but if you've been on PC a while, the structures and architectures have change/shifted so drastically over the years, it's not very reasonable to expect old titles to run flawlessly out the box on newer hardware/software. With a modicum of effort you can almost always find the solution to your problems.

That said, hex editing games that should support Ultrawide resolutions that bafflingly don't is more common than I'd like to see.
 
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I haven't played it in a while but I remember for Prey(2006) on Steam, you had a certain number of activations per account/pc that you would need to update and change if you changed hardware. Was so annoying. I should boot up Prey again, it's been a long time since I played that.
 

Krathoon

Member
When dealing with AC3, it is better just to buy the AC3 Remaster. It includes Liberation and the DLC for AC3.

Right now, it is only $10 on Ubisoft Connect.
 

Skifi28

Member
Getting older games to run well, or even run at all can really be an exercise in frustration. Even some not-so-old games have serious issues, but what can ya do.
 

Drew1440

Member
A lot of issues can be fixed by Installing the DirectX 9 runtimes. You might also have to manually install PhysX and OpenAL for games that used them. DRM like Safedisc and SecuROM will also cause issues, only solution is to Download a cracked exe if the publisher hasn't removed the DRM themselves.

But yeah, nothing worse than a game running in 640x480 by default, and fails to return to your normal resolution when exiting.
 

Krathoon

Member
Yeah. I have had to download numerous cracks for old games to get them to work. Then, Windows and Chrome starts flipping out when you download them because they think they are viruses.

I have ran some cracks in a WinXP VM just in case.
 

Danny Dudekisser

I paid good money for this Dynex!
Things like this are why the whole "PC has infinite backwards compatibility" notion is nonsense. There's a lot of annoyances, both major and minor, in getting many old games working, and plenty just straight up won't work on modern machines or hardware.

Anyway, I think the most annoying would be anything involving Games for Windows Live. Some games refused to save after a certain point in time, and others are flat-out broken. An absolute drain on PC gaming, courtesy of Microsoft trying to "support" PC gaming.
 

Alexios

Cores, shaders and BIOS oh my!
Idk, I never ran into anything that would qualify as 'bullcrap' that doesn't have to do with specific companies being assholes, ie requiring online servers that are down (for all systems). Generally, simple work arounds, whether that's editing/replacing a file or using an easy to use wrapper like dgVoodoo2 for the REALLY old stuff simply works and is a definite win for the benefit of a decades long library being as readily available as anything on any new machine without having to wait for a new port/remaster/remake that may never come or end up worse than the original game.
 

Guilty_AI

Member
Idk, I never ran into anything that would qualify as 'bullcrap' that doesn't have to do with specific companies being assholes, ie requiring online servers that are down (for all systems). Generally, simple work arounds, whether that's editing/replacing a file or using an easy to use wrapper like dgVoodoo2 for the REALLY old stuff simply works and is a definite win for the benefit of a decades long library being as readily available as anything on any new machine without having to wait for a new port/remaster/remake that may never come or end up worse than the original game.
Yeah, pretty much my experience. The main causes of an old game having trouble to run are always:
-Legacy DRM fucking up things.
-Game was already broken on release.

Otherwise, its usually very simple to set them up.

The cases i remember were trying to run Test Drive Unlimited and Driver, which i had the original disks for.
TDU run pretty much flawlessly, EXCEPT the game would 'freeze' after the tutorial race which i later found out was an anti-piracy measure that kept triggering for some reason :rolleyes:.
Same for Driver. Game wouldn't run at all and, again, Disk protection making use of legacy windows files that had long been removed from newer versions.

Solution for both? Crack'em.
 
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I wasn't able to play FEAR for a long time because there were issues with that game that caused it to run at like 10fps if you had newer Logitech device drivers on your machine, amongst other compatibility issues.


Anyway, a trip to PCGamingWiki will always point you in the right direction
 

Krathoon

Member
Oh yeah. PCGamingWiki will have a solution for a lot of the problems.

The thing is, it gets really annoying that a problem seems to crop up with each old game.

Also, it is annoying when you find out that the PC port of a game is a crappy port. Soul Reaver is a good example.
 
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rodrigolfp

Haptic Gamepads 4 Life
Things like this are why the whole "PC has infinite backwards compatibility" notion is nonsense. There's a lot of annoyances, both major and minor, in getting many old games working, and plenty just straight up won't work on modern machines or hardware.

Anyway, I think the most annoying would be anything involving Games for Windows Live. Some games refused to save after a certain point in time, and others are flat-out broken. An absolute drain on PC gaming, courtesy of Microsoft trying to "support" PC gaming.
It still can work so how is it non sense? Non sense would be having no way for it working.
 
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simpatico

Member
Vsync not working was a big one. D3Doverrider was the knight in shining armor. Rest up king, you served us all so well. NVCP vsync tanked FPS until pretty recently. It was basically D3Doverrider or nothing.
 
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rodrigolfp

Haptic Gamepads 4 Life
Oh yeah. PCGamingWiki will have a solution for a lot of the problems.

The thing is, it gets really annoying that a problem seems to crop up with each old game.

Also, it is annoying when you find out that the PC port of a game is a crappy port. Soul Reaver is a good example.
It infinitely less annoying than not having solutions or being stuck with lame limitations.
 

simpatico

Member
Idk, I never ran into anything that would qualify as 'bullcrap' that doesn't have to do with specific companies being assholes, ie requiring online servers that are down (for all systems). Generally, simple work arounds, whether that's editing/replacing a file or using an easy to use wrapper like dgVoodoo2 for the REALLY old stuff simply works and is a definite win for the benefit of a decades long library being as readily available as anything on any new machine without having to wait for a new port/remaster/remake that may never come or end up worse than the original game.
If I wanted to play my Resistance 2 disc in my PS5, what settings do I have to change in the system menu to get it running?
 

StreetsofBeige

Gold Member
It never affected me or my bro but one of those Ultima games. Maybe U6 or U7 had a bug in the final game and supposedly you couldn’t get far since the bug was a missing key. There was no downloadable patches back then so I guess you had to get a disc patch in the mail.

If you didn’t know about this fatal bug, you probably didn’t even know and just quit the game assuming you got stuck. But it was a missing key.
 

Krathoon

Member
Of course the PC version of AC1 does not use the controller right. I found a fan patch for XInput controller support.
 

Wildebeest

Member
There are real compatibility problems with games that ran on old versions of windows, but later stuff is mixed. DRM and online services are a problem, which is why they are not allowed on gog games. Then there is other stuff like abandoned API's. Like some games with physx are crashing on some AMD CPUs just because it is no longer really properly supported. Oddly enough, support for MSDOS software is amazing because of the work of dosbox developers. Free and open source doing what needs to be done.
 

RagnarokIV

Member
Agreed.

I find it funny that many PC gamers ignore and try to disregard this. I got note pads with all sorts of workarounds lol Be like "turn off V-Sync, disable windows security, don't play in 1080p, turn off AA"
Thank allah for iOS so my txt files have been modernized as notes on all my devices haha.
 

rodrigolfp

Haptic Gamepads 4 Life
Agreed.

I find it funny that many PC gamers ignore and try to disregard this. I got note pads with all sorts of workarounds lol Be like "turn off V-Sync, disable windows security, don't play in 1080p, turn off AA"
The only that ignore this are those that don't play those games.
 
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Krathoon

Member
What is good about the PC version of AC1 is that it is the Director's Cut version. They replaced some crappy missions with better ones.

So, it is the final version of the game. I am not certain if they put the Director's Cut on consoles.
 

Krathoon

Member
Of course, I find out that AC1 is on gog after I bought the Steam version. Poop.

Also, it is $5 on Ubisoft. So, double poop.
 
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ArtHands

Thinks buying more servers can fix a bad patch
Assassin's Creed 3 remaster exist for a reason: they are build with better compatibility with modern hardware.

Wait till you try to play Assassin's Creed 1 on the PS5 or Series X.
 
A pet peeve of mine is AC2. Most problems can be fixed with fan patches and whatnot but it is hardlocked at 60 fps and this causes stutter issues. The only solution I've seen is playing at 50 fps which is a bit lame.
 
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Soodanim

Member
Oh yeah. PCGamingWiki will have a solution for a lot of the problems.

The thing is, it gets really annoying that a problem seems to crop up with each old game.

Also, it is annoying when you find out that the PC port of a game is a crappy port. Soul Reaver is a good example.
There is a decomp of SR1 in progress, I'm looking forward to that being finished. Speaking of that franchise, people may be interested to know about Gemini's patches for SR2 and BO2:

For the people complaining because not all PC games run perfectly on modern systems and therefore that invalidates the entire back catalogue, I've yet to see what your preferred alternative with a greater backcompat rate is.
 
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GametimeUK

Member
I hate having to do workarounds to get my older PC games up and running, but it is nice that the option is there to fix the game a majority of the time.

There's no playing Bloodborne at 60fps on my PS5 at the moment since my PS5 is too high a firmware to mod.

There's no tweaking ini files to up the resolution on older games when playing on console.

I have to resort to streaming old PS3 games like Heavenly Sword if I want to play it on PS5. Ironically I can play that game on PC regardless.

I dunno. I wish it all just worked, but PC at least gives the flexibility to fix a majority of issues.
 

Guilty_AI

Member
I can play Deus Ex happily on my Series X, not that's the point.

I still have the likes of these and all won't play on my modern PC (without work around) so its wrong IMO for DF to make out the PC is the BC King

t0e4qOv.jpg


TMLKbv3.jpeg
Yeah, and i got all of these and they won't play on a my ps4, workaround or not. Unless i'm willing to pay for some overpriced remaster of course.

81PBF+W0ehL._AC_UF1000,1000_QL80_.jpg
71sJ-2cS4BL._AC_UF1000,1000_QL80_.jpg
Metal_Gear_Solid_4_Guns_Of_The_Patriots___Ps3_586959-1.jpg

81rKa01DFWL.jpg
2398792115_1GG.jpg


As others have said, if PC isn't the BC king, whats above it?
 

Hudo

Member
I found it legitimately easier to get old-ass games to run on Linux via Bottles/Wine and/or Proton via Steam (just add the game) than on Windows 11. YMMV, tho.
 
I can play Deus Ex happily on my Series X, not that's the point.

I still have the likes of these and all won't play on my modern PC (without work around) so its wrong IMO for DF to make out the PC is the BC King

t0e4qOv.jpg


TMLKbv3.jpeg
This is such a disingenuous post.

-------

The amount of mental gymnastics some of you will go to denigrate the PC as THE best option for playing all your games with a little work via emulation/bc/mods/etc. is hilarious.

NO SHIT your games from 20+ years ago won't just work putting a disk in a disk drive. That's not how anything works these days. I'd wager most people don't even have disk drives in there PC, I certainly haven't in 15 years.

Even that aside, it's like saying, "My cassette's don't work flawlessly on my iPhone. My iPhone is brand new and could easily handle playing my music, it should just work, iPhone is no longer a media juggernaut"
 
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Topher

Gold Member
I've had some older games that were somehow ported to PC without controller support. Mass Effect and Beyond Good and Evil, for example.
 
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