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Re: Old Games



I don't know if this will work either, but have you tried using the
emergency repair disk.  It allows you a low level access to dos and contains
the advanced memory mappers of windows.


----- Original Message -----
From: "Brown, Peter J" <p.j.brown@ic.ac.uk>
To: <gameprogrammer@gameprogrammer.com>
Sent: Tuesday, February 13, 2001 7:09 AM
Subject: RE: Old Games


> Another option (and I should confess I've not actually tried this yet, but
> see no reason why it shouldn't work in theory) . . .  Partition Magic /
Boot
> Magic - set up a small FAT 16 DOS partition on your disk and boot into it
> when you want to do DOS things.
>
> Pete
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: Paul Robson [SMTP:probson@powerup.com.au]
> > Sent: Tuesday, February 13, 2001 1:21 PM
> > To: gameprogrammer@gameprogrammer.com
> > Subject: RE: Old Games
> >
> > Hi Rob,
> >
> > Unfortunately, the dos 7 (or whatever it is when win95 came out) is
quite
> > a
> > bit bigger that DOS6.2 for example.  I have found it impossible to any
dos
> > games with the "new" version of MSDos becoz it just takes up too much
base
> > memory.  The only way around this problem is to make a boot disk that
has
> > dos6.2 or whatever.. and run memmaker on it to get all your tsr proggies
> > and
> > drivers into high memory.  If you're running win98 or better, you're
most
> > likely using FAT32, and this makes a bit of a problem, as dos6.2 and
lower
> > have no support for fat32.  So in effect, you wont be able to use your
> > hard
> > disk.  makes things a tad hard doesn't it?  The only good solution is to
> > get
> > one of your old 486s and install plain dos on it to play all the old
> > games.
> >
> > sucks, I know.
> >
> >
> > Paul
> >
> >
> > >Hi,
> > >
> > >This as a question nor really on the subject of lprogramming but more
> > holw
> > to get old games to work. To any of you have any >tips/ideas for running
> > old
> > DOS games. Specifcally the game I am trying to run is The 7th Guest,
which
> > I
> > have had for years >but have never been able to get to work. Do any of
you
> > know how to make a decent DOS boot disk which enables the CD drivers >to
> > work and have a decent amount of base memory (640k) left. Also can there
> > be
> > problem trying to play old games on a >relativly new machine??
> > >
> > >Thanks,
> > >Rob.
> > >
> > >P.S. Having just looked in the troubleshooting guide it says I need
512k
> > base memory in conjunction with EMM386 or some >such memory manager and
CD
> > +
> > mouse must work..
> >
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