Kotor 2 Windows 7

Scientiae: Do you have an Integrated Graphics system (i.e., the pc has no extra graphics card, e.g., an old laptop without a GPU)?I managed to work around this problem, but not with the GOG version.(I'm still working to resolve this, but not in any timely fashion, as I can play the game with my European retail copy, patched to US — the GOG version seems to be the US commercial release — and with the lost content added via the TSLRCM, a third-party mod that restores the content which had been cut from the final version owing to a lack of time to finish the game before its Christmas release). I'm working with an Intel graphics card. I've gone through all the steps including the.ini change (it was already set to 0), and nothing is working for me.

How'd you fix it? Djchan08: I'm working with an Intel graphics card. I've gone through all the steps including the.ini change (it was already set to 0), and nothing is working for me. How'd you fix it?

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I re-installed my CD-based version.:/So now, unless I want to play Rome: Total War (which is the only other game I play that requires a play disc in the drive, since I replaced my catalogue with GoG DRM-free versions), my CD drive contains the play disc for KotOR—TSL.It's not ideal, but I didn't want to mess with my stable configuration too much, since I don't play this game very often. (I'm half-way through my first grey alternative, as I explore the destruction of the Old Republic under my character's gubernatorial whims )I keep a weather eye on this thread to check if someone else has solved this problem for an integrated graphics chip. (There may be a driver to download, from Intel, to fix this. I read a thread about it somewhere here I'm not sure what the driver solves, since I didn't download it.)Good luck!

As always, Steam’s annual Christmas sale meant I’d be dumping the best part of two months’ rent on cheap and shiny video games to play. I’ve not played a big RPG for far too long, so it seemed now would be a good time to finally get into Knights of the Old Republic.It was Bioware’s exceptionally well received Star Wars RPG set in the era when there were a ton of Sith around being dicks and it’s your job to be more or less of a dick depending on your particular mood that day/save file. The only problem with my purchase? KOTOR doesn’t work on Windows 7. Shit.But complaining won’t do much good. I had to get this fixed! Two easy fixes for Knights of the Old Republic on modern machinesThere are two compatibility strategies that can sometimes get rid of the gremlins that make games crap out.

Besides, they also double as “Do these just in case and change them back if you really want to” steps. In a pinch, they can solve the problem of the game not starting up/having errors in XP, and I’ve heard whisperings that they sometimes fix things in Vista. First off, if you have the game on Steam, disable the Steam overlay in-game by right clicking KOTOR in your library,. click Properties and it’s the checkbox under the General tab. The normally helpful Steam overlay can sometimes interfere with games from the pre-Steam era (otherwise known as the Golden Age of PC Gaming).Done that?

Still not working? Not to worry.

What is a g7 chord on a guitar. Open up the folder where you installed the game. If you’re on Steam, it’s in your common folder under your account name in the directory where you installed it.

If you’re not on Steam, the folder is wherever you installed the game (check Program Files if you get lost). Find the swkotor.exe file – right click it and open up Properties.

Set it to run in compatibility mode for Windows XP SP2. Also check the box to run as an administrator. Save the changes, right click swkotor.exe, create a shortcut and throw it down on your desktop. Double click the shortcut; remember to blinkCompatibility Mode was designed specifically for situations like this, where perfectly good (and old) software is acting bad (and old). This change can therefore solve a lot of the issues with KOTOR not running brilliantly on your modern Windows 7 (and probably Vista or Windows 8) system. This is often all you need to do if you’ve had the game on your current machine before, but it’s not the be all and end all.There are additional steps you can take to fix KOTOR if you’re still having problems, but do not attempt the following fixes until you’ve already tried those above.Another possible fix for KOTOR not starting up on Windows 7So you’ve done the above and still no joy. A lot of people get this far and become dejected/confused, and in their desperation they try cruising for various patches/updates.DO.

THIS.KOTOR patches are largely unnecessary and can really screw you over if you’re on Steam (namely: the game won’t open at all, and you’ll be asked for CDs you don’t have). Instead, try the following:.

Go to where you installed Knights of the Old Republic. You see the swkotor.exe file we messed with earlier? You should also see a file called swconfig.exe in the same folder.

Open it up. Change the resolution to your native resolution or the highest resolution available.

Uncheck V-Sync. Uncheck ‘Enable Hardware Mouse’. Check ‘Disable Movies.’ Don’t worry; this only disables the intro logo movies for LucasArts and Bioware, so you won’t miss out on any cutscenes in the actual game. Save all your changes. Double click the shortcut you made beforeThis is the only way I’ve found to get KOTOR to work on Windows 7 and Vista. Don’t get me wrong, I’ve seen other fixes out there, but they seem overly complex and rather daunting to perform.I’ve been told that these fixes won’t solve every problem with getting KOTOR working on modern versions of Windows as it’s a rather picky game. Apparently, there are certain graphics cards that the game just doesn’t want to cooperate with, so if the above doesn’t make it work for you, Google your graphics card and make sure you’re not one of the unlucky ones.Still, disregarding odd circumstances, this should make Knights of the Old Republic run quite nicely on modern Windows systems by throwing you instantly to the game’s menu screen to do with what you please.

Enjoy!. If you’ve lost it, don’t worry, just look under Star Wars. I didn’t and felt very stupid afterwards. I’ve been fiddling!Also in compatibility options there are a bunch of check boxes. (256 colors, 624 resolution, disable display themes, etc.)I decided to check all of them to see if anything happened, and I got a black loading screen and some glitchy shots of my taskbar. I call it progress.Running it in 256 colors got me the farthest, which is to say, a black screen.

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Checking 624 resolution got me the taskbar glitch, but then a popup stating the resolution is to low, then the thing crashes again. Binerexis. Windows 7: Ultimate SP1 – 32 bitToshbia Satellite A135Intel Celeron M CPU 430 @ 1.73GHz2gb RamATI RADEON XPRESS 200M Series–Driver: 8.31.100.32–Direct X 9.0 or better——I have the 4 disc set of both KOTOR 1 & 2 and did the above to no avail. My comp just loads to a low res black screen and after 2 seconds displays “program not responding checking for solutions.” Then “Cannot find solutions blah blah blah” click close program. I am trying to attempt “but I perfer pictures haha and I’m getting confused.

Is there a simpler way to fix this? Or a REAL (preferably clearly stated not going back and forth in reference) Step by Step fix?Thanks. Binerexis. Movies not showing when you disable movies is kind of the point;POk, go to your KOTOR folder and find where the cutscene movies are.

Kotor 2 Movie Fix

If I remember correctly, they’re all named with numbers. What you want to do is identify the movies used when you first load up the game (logos etc). Change the file names so that they become OLD. This means that when you load up the game, it looks for the intro cinematics (the ones which often cause people to crash when opening the game). It does find those files (because you renamed them) so it throws you straight to the main menu. This should allow you to play the rest of the game fine.DON’T FORGET TO RE-ENABLE MOVIES AFTER CHANGING FILE NAMES. Stepn.

Awesome walkthrough you’ve made hereUnfortunately I couldn’t get my KOTOR 2 to work thoughI originally had windows 7 and the game on disc and it ran fineThen I upgraded to windows 10 and its all downhill from thereNever makes it past the Obsidian title screenand I tried all of the compatability modes, on both Steam and the Disney Updated versionNothingI have an Intel Graphics card, which is a common trait of many running into this issueI wish LucasArts would take care of it, or whoever owns it now. rh. So I played with my.ini file on both the Steam and Disc versions, and when I reduced fullscreen to 0, and added Graphics Options:AllowWindowedMode=1 following, my game opened and would continue to play; this will open the game as a stacked window rather than minimized or maximized/fullscreen. As long as I keep the game in this format, it will play any cutscene, or you can click through any cutscene, which was the big shutdown for me before. After you pass a cutscene, you can then right click the top of the window, and maximize, and it will bring you full screen. After that, you just have to right click on your mouse to bring the cursor back into the game.Hopefully all of this information will eventually offer an insight into what exactly the problem is for everyone.

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Peter. The part about disabling movies is completely, 100% WRONG. There are tons of cutscenes in the game that are actual movies that will be missed with that checked. People get confused because “cutscenes” still play, that is, parts of the game where you are watching without any control over what is happening.

These, however, are not MOVIES. Movies are things like the dream sequences. You WILL NOT see these scenes with this box checked. Especially for those of us who never saw them. Disabling them can help with making the game actually work. To say that it’s a “wrong” solution because there are still portions of the game which take control away from the player is picking on semantics.All of the movies that you disable can still be found in the folder and can be watched whenever you like so you don’t miss out. There used to be a playlist on YouTube which had all of the movies and told you when to watch them in relation to the story.

It sucks if you’ve never seen them before but not seeing a few movies (most, if not all of which, have their events summarised in conversations immediately after they happen) isn’t as bad as not getting the game to run AT ALL. You need to start your article off with a disclaimer that THIS IS FOR THE STEAM VERSIONS ONLY.

The patches you advise people to avoid are necessary for the original CD versions (Which is what they were made for) – that’s why your fixes weren’t working for Mickey (didn’t you see him say he was using the CD versions?).Although frankly, the real fix for this is “Throw bricks at Valve until they stop making minor tweaks to TF2 and come fix some more serious problems that exist because they half-assed things”. This mess is especially egregious in the case of KOTOR 1 because the Best of PC release of that game was already updated to be compatible with Vista and 7 so the morons should have just used that version instead of half-assedly porting the 2003 version. Well I have old CD disks.

But KOTOR is weird for me. Occasionally runs fine but after awhile it won’t run at all till I reboot my laptop and then it works. I don’t know what happens, I think it may be a system conflict of some sort or some sort of conflict. I get the loadup screen and I punch it and I get the Ebon Hawk and nothing.

I’ve tried all sorts of things to correct it. Eventually, I give up and reboot my laptop and then it works. I am pretty sure this isn’t suppose to be normal.

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