Re: Running UT2004 on Windows 10
Posted: Sat 26. Dec 2015, 13:22
Glad to see that it works! 

Is that a win10 problem?Wormbo wrote:Do yourself a favor an never ever install UT2004 anywhere under Program Files, but e.g. directly under the root of your C: drive.
It doesn't cause problems I think, but I can say for sure that on Win7, on Win8 and on Win10 it will restrict certain procedures. So if an error occurs you will have a hard time fixing it due to these restrictions.Miauz55555 wrote:Is that a win10 problem?Wormbo wrote:Do yourself a favor an never ever install UT2004 anywhere under Program Files, but e.g. directly under the root of your C: drive.
I have it on win7 under D,prog,games,epic,ut and no problem. Or it's because I have the 6CD-DVD? I also had never a problem when I just copied the files in the folder.
I had the same issue before when I had to reinstall my OS and everything else on my PC, back on Win7. From what Wormbo said, it seems like it's a problem with spaces in the installation path.Miauz55555 wrote:Is that a win10 problem?Wormbo wrote:Do yourself a favor an never ever install UT2004 anywhere under Program Files, but e.g. directly under the root of your C: drive.
I have it on win7 under D,prog,games,epic,ut and no problem. Or it's because I have the 6CD-DVD? I also had never a problem when I just copied the files in the folder.
Yes I think so. In CD6 are the special tools which will not install automaticly.EmanReleipS wrote:[...]I have it on a single DVD, but it has 6 folders on it labeled "CD1", "CD2" and so forth. Is that the same as yours?
Thanks for the clarification. That reminds me, with the previous installation in the Program Files folder I had to open Notepad++ as an administrator to make any changes to the ini file. That probably caused the problems.Wormbo wrote:The program files folder is problematic in several ways. Spaces is a potential problem, but a very real one is that UT200x assumes it always has full write access to its installation folder. That was standard for administrators up until WinXP. Starting with Vista, however, the UAC feature restricted access rights even for programs started by an administrator unless it was either explicitly launched with admin rights from the start or later requested them.
I think that's because the original game release back in 2004 was on 5 installation CDs and a play CD to be able to run the game. I had a box of these CDs when I first bought the game, but gave it away a few years ago, when I had several copies on DVDs, which came with all the updates and no need for the play CD.EmanReleipS wrote:
What's a 6CD-DVD? I have it on a single DVD, but it has 6 folders on it labeled "CD1", "CD2" and so forth. Is that the same as yours?