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Will Denuvo prevent Large Address Aware?


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15 réponses à ce sujet

#1
mortons4ck

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A question for Bioware/EA: does the Denuvo anti-tampering system prevent the PC version application of Dragon Age: Inquisition from using more than 2GB of memory?



#2
Gothfather

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Have you seen the PC specs? If so that will answer your question.



#3
I WANT YOU TO FUCK ME JERY

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Seeing as the game requires more than that...

#4
Otter-under-the-mountain

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It's possible that I'm misunderstanding something (and/or mentally debilitated by the cough syrup that I can't remember if it was for day or night), but why would you even want to enable Large Address Aware? DA:I is built in Frostbite 3, which is 64-bit only (and the specs specifically mention it needs a 64-bit operating system and 4GB of RAM).


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#5
Monochrome Wench

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Changing Large Address Aware is unnecessary. The game is 64 bit and already is large address aware.


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#6
mortons4ck

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It's possible that I'm misunderstanding something (and/or mentally debilitated by the cough syrup that I can't remember if it was for day or night), but why would you even want to enable Large Address Aware? DA:I is built in Frostbite 3, which is 64-bit only (and the specs specifically mention it needs a 64-bit operating system and 4GB of RAM).

Right, forgot about Frostbite 3 being 64-bit only.  I'm used to the previous 2 games being 32-bit, and Origin being flexible enough to allow LAA.

 

Did anyone else notice their preloaded game files for Inquisition being stored in the Program Files (x86) folder? (which, admittedly, might not be anything to worry about)



#7
ufarax

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If I get one hicup, I will demand a refund. I have no patience for "DRM that's not really a DRM". One stutter one crash, and I will ask for a refund. I"m tempted to ask for one now.



#8
Lumix19

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If I get one hicup, I will demand a refund. I have no patience for "DRM that's not really a DRM". One stutter one crash, and I will ask for a refund. I"m tempted to ask for one now.

Kind of an overreaction don't you think?



#9
Fozee

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Kind of an overreaction don't you think?

 

Yes. Yes it is. 



#10
ufarax

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It's my money, and I will over react if I want to.



#11
Lumix19

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It's my money, and I will over react if I want to.

That's fine as long as you admit it, which you have.



#12
Kantr

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What about if those hiccups are due to your system or drivers not yet optimising the game?


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#13
Otter-under-the-mountain

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Did anyone else notice their preloaded game files for Inquisition being stored in the Program Files (x86) folder? (which, admittedly, might not be anything to worry about)

Yes. It seems that Origin's default place to put its games is there. It doesn't seem to be a problem for Battlefield 4, which uses the same engine, so I imagine it either works their or Origin is smart enough to handle it.



#14
Kantr

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Yes. It seems that Origin's default place to put its games is there. It doesn't seem to be a problem for Battlefield 4, which uses the same engine, so I imagine it either works their or Origin is smart enough to handle it.

The install location has nothing to do with how the game handles memory. You could tell it to install in program files or entirely on the desktop



#15
ufarax

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I don't care, it's my money...and my system is perfect, EAWare is responsible for all hiccups, real or imaginary. Don't try to confuse me with your logic.



#16
Efrim

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I don't care, it's my money...and my system is perfect, EAWare is responsible for all hiccups, real or imaginary. Don't try to confuse me with your logic.

http://en.wikipedia..../wiki/Poe's_law
 


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