Read here for all the guides and tips provided by the Head Developer: http://www.moddb.com/mods/full-invasion-2/tutorials/stop-crashing-in-game-in-v0115-if-you-have-a-64-bit-pc
First of all,
Make sure you do the cmd changes.
type cmd in search bar, then bring up the CMD, in Command Prompt type
"bcdedit /set IncreaseUserVA 4096" without quotes and press ENTER - You must manually type it , not copy and paste, otherwise it won't work
make sure you put Corpses to 0, Use Low Res v0119 and it should be fine
Try not to play on a overpopulated server, too many bots can crashed your game because warband is not a optimized game. When 600 Bots appear on your screen anyone who doesn't have the best pc will crashed instantly
- there is a space between edit and /set and a space between VA and 4096
-Apparently from what Lisa says, that you will crashed in map change if you use dx7. If you switch to dx9 it should not crash
if it says unrecognized:
First of all,
Make sure you do the cmd changes.
type cmd in search bar, then bring up the CMD, in Command Prompt type
"bcdedit /set IncreaseUserVA 4096" without quotes and press ENTER - You must manually type it , not copy and paste, otherwise it won't work
make sure you put Corpses to 0, Use Low Res v0119 and it should be fine
Try not to play on a overpopulated server, too many bots can crashed your game because warband is not a optimized game. When 600 Bots appear on your screen anyone who doesn't have the best pc will crashed instantly
- there is a space between edit and /set and a space between VA and 4096
-Apparently from what Lisa says, that you will crashed in map change if you use dx7. If you switch to dx9 it should not crash
if it says unrecognized:
Your PATH variable needs to include the C:\Windows\System32 and C:\Windows folders, that's probably why it's not finding those commands.
I have no idea why it got screwed up, but you can fix it by:
- Click Start, right-click "Computer", and select "Properties"
- Click the "Advanced System Settings" in the left pane
- Click the "Advanced" tab
- Click the "Environment Variables..." button near the bottom of the dialogue box
- Change the value of the PATH variable in the upper box if it exists there, or in the lower box if it doesn't. Be sure to separate each folder name with a ";" (semicolon) character.
I have no idea why it got screwed up, but you can fix it by:
- Click Start, right-click "Computer", and select "Properties"
- Click the "Advanced System Settings" in the left pane
- Click the "Advanced" tab
- Click the "Environment Variables..." button near the bottom of the dialogue box
- Change the value of the PATH variable in the upper box if it exists there, or in the lower box if it doesn't. Be sure to separate each folder name with a ";" (semicolon) character.