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InSaintMonoxide: WWF Raw from 2002. It runs fine fresh after install but at the second or third start the game suddenly runs brutally choppy and the only fix is uninstall and re-install. This has happened on all 3 of my Windows 10 systems eventually and the issue seems so obscure that i cannot find a fix.
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Fonzer: I have this in sven mach's noch einmal or sven 7 i think on windows 10.
The game likes to slow down and become choppy unless i restart the pc then it suddenly works clean.
It only lags if i haven't restarted my pc in a while and i do turn off my pc every day and then turn it on the next day.
The issue is almost similar.
I wonder what causes this. The fact that it can run fine under the right circumstances probably means there is some extremely simple tweak to fix it. The problem is i can't find a solution anywhere.
Speaking of old games, what causes the BC Error 435 error message in Operation Body Count (DOS)?
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Leroux: I still have (Captain) Claw on CD-ROM but can't run it because I think the installer is 32-bit or incompatible with my current Win 64-bit system in some other way. The same might apply to Heart of Darkness.
The project is a little dusty, but I think you'll find this quite pleasing.


Creatures: The Albian Years
It's probably due to me running them in Wine rather than a virtual machine; and some missing DLL or library nobody thought to mention. I can open a world, I can get a norn into it via the debugging tools, but I can't actually open any of the modules. (No, the remastered patch didn't do anything.) And the speed of OpenC2E's development is...slow.

Interstate 76
I did have this running for a time, but that was one hard drive ago. Someone should just make a bloody source port already; so everyone has to jump though less hoops to hear Stampede read poems.

Space Quest IV: This game is infamously broken in many places. Even running it on period accurate hardware will still not be perfect because oops, your bus speed is slightly different, here come the time cops.

Mordor: The Depths of Dejnol: One of the very few dungeon crawls I like, it won't run because frankly put, it appears to be doing weird tricks in order to run multiple programs (perhaps even via DOS) that doesn't jive with Modern Ways of Doing Things. You can go to the store, look at guilds, but entering the dungeon or looking in the guild library will cause it to crash.
Post edited November 29, 2023 by Darvond
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Random_Coffee: I remember a friend telling me about how Elder Scrolls: Redguard was basically impossible to play on any hardware he had.
I tried playing it myself when the GOG version released, and I couldn't.
One of very few tech-related refunds I've done here.
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BreOl72: This got me curious.
Installed, started.
Credits, background story with voice over, talk in the tavern.
Everything runs fine.
Cut to ship, two pirates attack which I have to fight back.
Could be played without flaws.
Took me just a little time to figure out how to sword fight.
(a time which could have been avoided, had I read the manual first)
Arrival in the port, reading the letter, talking to the captain.
All fine. No problems.
I play on a PC with Win10.
Good to know. Maybe they applied some fixes since then. I bought it on GOG release (2015?), asked support for help, and they said they would likely not be able to solve the issue, as it was made for old 3dfx architecture. I don't remember what OS I was running back then, but it was either Windows 7 or 10.
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clarry: I'm curious. At one point in time, it wasn't too uncommon for it to be very tricky to get old games running well or at all. But now that decades of effort has gone into emulation, community patches, etcetra., do you still find games that are impossible to run? Which games?

I'm especially curious about anything from the 90s (DOS to Win98 era or so).
If you mean the original retail versions of games, two obstacles:

1. CD copy protections are increasingly incompatible with newer Windows versions.

2. Less and less people have optical CD/DVD drives on their PCs anymore, and I am unsure if USB DVD drives that you can still buy are fully compatible with the aforementioned copy protections.

Naturally you can try to circumvent those issues by using noCD cracks, trying to make working CD/DVD images of your discs etc., but it can be quite a lot of hassle.
Nuclear Strike CD version is a pita, starting with the installer.
Syndicate Wars has a few speed problems. As well as the buttons can stick, while turning the camera. As in they fail workk
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clarry: But now that decades of effort has gone into emulation, community patches, etcetra., do you still find games that are impossible to run? Which games?
None that I can think of.
There are so many third party tools and everything that anything can be run. Obviously there are some glitches and some features may not be available as originally intended. But on the other hand, in many cases there are some new extra features, such as widescreen hacks for 4:3 games and so on.

A game that simply wouldn't run at all, that I haven't personally seen yet.


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Darvond: Space Quest IV: This game is infamously broken in many places. Even running it on period accurate hardware will still not be perfect because oops, your bus speed is slightly different, here come the time cops.
Space Quest IV is a very annoying game as is, but I don't think the problems are related to compatibility.

In fact, there are so many ways to run that game on modern systems.
DOSbox, ScummVM, fan patches to fix things ("New Rising Sun" and others), etc.

Unless you want absolute perfection, it's actually an example of an old game that is easy to run on modern systems, rather than an example of something that is impossible to run.
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timppu: 2. Less and less people have optical CD/DVD drives on their PCs anymore, and I am unsure if USB DVD drives that you can still buy are fully compatible with the aforementioned copy protections.

Naturally you can try to circumvent those issues by using noCD cracks, trying to make working CD/DVD images of your discs etc., but it can be quite a lot of hassle.
Or just buy an external/internal drive. Them not being included in pre-builts these days doesn't mean they ceased to exist. They are also very cheap. If you have a lot of older games on discs, there is absolutely no reason to not have a drive for them other than laziness.

That being said, you should still absolutely use a no-cd patch/crack for any game you can to prolong the disc's lifespan.
Post edited November 29, 2023 by idbeholdME
Mig Alley
is the one that comes to mind for me... I tried finding some recent repacks around, but even the few times I managed to get to the start screen, game is extremely unstable
Post edited November 29, 2023 by Antaniserse
I have the opposite problem...trying to run new games on my old system!!!
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idbeholdME: Or just buy an external/internal drive. Them not being included in pre-builts these days doesn't mean they ceased to exist. They are also very cheap. If you have a lot of older games on discs, there is absolutely no reason to not have a drive for them other than laziness.

That being said, you should still absolutely use a no-cd patch/crack for any game you can to prolong the disc's lifespan.
I mentioned USB DVD drives, as I have one. I guess you can even buy USB floppy drives nowadays, in case you have some old floppy games lying around.

However, I seem to remember reading that they may have issues e.g. with some copy protections and stuff.
Pro Rally 2001.... well most Ubisoft games of that era actually
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neumi5694: Nuclear Strike CD version is a pita, starting with the installer.
It works great with dgVoodoo 2, if you have trouble installing old games try the suggestions on this page.

https://reactos.org/forum/viewtopic.php?p=90351
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idbeholdME: Incoming and Incoming Forces are two games I had a lot of problems with.

Its subforum here on GOG is pretty much filled with threads about various technical issues. Managed to get Incoming working manageably with some workarounds, but I couldn't get the music in Incoming Forces to not stutter, so I refrained from playing it. The same issue was in the first game, but you could fix the stuttering by saving the game and loading the save. Because you can no longer save freely in IF, I can't even try the same workaround.
True, I own Incoming on GOG and it has a lot of issues so I dusted off my old cd-rom and I almost got it working flawlessly but still with some annoying graphic anomalies using dgVoodoo 2 (without it it wouldn't work).
I eventually bought the Zoom Platform version, which also has the expansion pack, which works great.
Which proves gog needs to improve their stuff if they want to claim what they preach.
Post edited November 29, 2023 by Strijkbout
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timppu: However, I seem to remember reading that they may have issues e.g. with some copy protections and stuff.
True. That does ring a bell. Luckily, I'm still using my now 10+ years old internal drive and it still works without issues :P
Post edited November 29, 2023 by idbeholdME
I remember trying to run the Exile games via WINE in a VM under Linux. (Haven't tried recently.)

I believe I got Exile: Escape from the Pit to run nicely, but didn't have any success with Exile 2: Crystal Souls or Exile 3: Ruined World. (Yes, these games have been remade more than once, but some people prefer the originals, particularly since there's many spells that didn't make it into the remakes, and the remakes also ditched the simple tile-based view in exchange for a slanted isometric view.