<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE(Duke fan in need @ Jun 14 2006, 08:56 PM) [snapback]236865[/snapback]</div>
Quote:
Help!
I downloaded Blood a while ago and everything pretty much went fine. I unzipped it and after I finally figured out how to create a working shortcut to it, it worked fine. Now the shortcut won't work and I can't re-install Blood. It keeps making temporary files, but not actual files
I don't know what to do now because I can't even play it after directly unzipping it anymore! It really sucks because I was pretty far and it is an awesome game. Whenever I try to do so, it just gives me the message that it can't run in a window and asks me to run in full screen, but when I try to run in full-screen it just gives me an error anyway.
I know for a fact that my computer is advanced enough to run it correctly, but just in case here are my computer specs:
Dell Dimension 300mhz processor
Windows 98
220 MB RAM
16 MB graphics card (Corell Graphics)
Sound Blaster sound card
Any helpful tips on correctly installing and shortcutting to it [so it won't quit working]?
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Well -. if it has been running fine - and then it stopped working, something must have been changed (hope it's not something that simple than you moved the folder around on the harddisk to clean up

).
Well - Blood runs normally fine on a Win98 System - best of all in pure DOS mode - but anyway - it also runs in Windows full-screen mode when following the instructions postetd in this thread already several times - just read a bit <_<
Try to remove the game and all shortcuts you've created completly from your harddisk, then unzip all files again from the downloaded archiv, run setup.exe, then double click blood.exe. If it runs fine, just right click on the blood.exe and choose "Create Shortcut" (or mark the blood.exe, hold down the right Mouse button and drag/drop it to your desktop - choose "Create shortcut here" from the submenu that appears when you drop the file to your desktop). That should do the trick - otherwise tell us what goes wrong on one of those steps.
Cheers,
Peter