Sims 3 Large Address Aware
I first stumbled across the possibility of setting a Large Address Aware Flag when searching for solutions for steady crashes in Fallout 3, some years ago. Fallout 3 however didn't benefit from setting this LAA Flag in my case. Delphy's Sims 3 Pack Multi-Extracter. This tool extracts files from Sims3Packs so you can place them in your Packages folder. Click here to learn more. Large Address Aware (4GB patch) By default, The Sims 3 can only access 2GB of RAM. If you have more installed, this tool will allow your game to access 4GB of RAM, making it faster. The Sims 3 patches and Large Address Aware For anyone who may have installed this as I recommended before., I hope that you kept backup copies of the original exe files, because if you try to install the patch with the LAA modified files, it will fail and then completely bork the Launcher, as I found out the hard way just now.
Change the 'GB Usage': (presuming you meant RAM not harddrive) You can't change the RAM usage for the game - it's a 32-bit game and it's not possible for it to use a lot. It's already large-address aware in version 1.67, so there's no need to apply any fixes in that line.Turn off memories: Some people do it because it makes their game run better without resources being devoted to SIm memories. For the Sims, there is virtually no effect. Many people are annoyed by the constant messages of 'Your Sim just. For the first time' (especially since the game repeatedly gets it wrong and sends you that message every time your Sim does something).Overwatch or ErrorTrap: Most people use both. Overwatch sees to the running of the game, cleaning up problems the game itself fails to clean up, such as route-stuck Sims, stuck aging checks, abandoned cars, abandoned toddlers, TVs and stereos left on all over town, &c. ErrorTrap seees to your save files and helps ensure they are clean and error-free.
I also recommend Traveler if you have University Life, World Adventures, or Into the Future installed, as it takes care of destination transitions that otherwise are often buggy and fail (for example, without it, your Sim's gender preferences and relationships are often wiped when they go on vacation).
Hallo dear community and hopefully also dear development staff,this question is more of a plea or advice or a reminiscence about QA or user-friendliness endeavors in a wider sense.I first stumbled across the possibility of setting a Large Address Aware Flag when searching for solutions for steady crashes in Fallout 3, some years ago. Fallout 3 however didn't benefit from setting this LAA Flag in my case. My issues were caused by graphic driver intricacies.With Dragon Age a different common problem caught my attention, as I experienced it.The community uses the phrase Memory Lags for it and that got me stuck on testing the possibility that the exact fix that didn't work for me in Fallout 3, might do something good here.After some research I discovered several people's notes about the effects of Large Address Awareness on the DAOrigins.exe and the actual game experience. Most of these people stated they had significantly reduced slowdown as well as loading times and crashing behavior compared to the former case with unmodified.exe files.I thought to myself: What the hell, why not just try it!? So I used CFF Explorer, set the LAA flag within the file header of my DAOrigins.exe and had to learn that the steam version of the game well differs from the retail-DVD-version that people who got this flag set and working must have had installed.My first thought was that Steam was responsible for setting up the game loader that actually puts out Steam Error 51 when altering the.exe file and trying to execute it. I contacted Steam and in the end they revealed to me they were not authorized to create/change the program files they've been sent.
EA was in charge for programming all the data they use.In consequence I contacted the EA support and because they clearly don't possess the authority, too, that is needed to change the files sent to Steam and other platforms, I ended up here.My suggestion for EA, that I still think of as worth doing, is to expand the hash values database of the loader/checker that is sent to Steam, etc. By exactly one value (that the DAOrigins.exe with LAA flag has) and to include the quasi-64-bit.exe into the package as optional file so people with platform versions of the game may try to avoid the Memory Lag problem by running this file.As I said before: The retail version does work with LAA flag. It's just that the Steam loader won't start the game, because it has a hash value check present (most probably) that does not accept the different value that comes from flagging the DAOrigins.exe.By the way: The support actually advised me to use the cmd command 'bcdedit /set increaseuserva 2500'.An honorable suggestion brought forth to mediate, but sadly having an impact on every application that will be run by the OS and thus, in my opinion, being the less desirable option. That's why an OS has features like the LAA flag implemented into their structure.I hope this does anyhow, anytime help anybody in the present of future. That's why I came up with suggesting it after all.Best regardsD.
Sims 3 Large Address Aware Online
For all of you who have a Steam-bought Dragon Age Origins key and want to test the possibility of LAA on the executable, this might be interesting:I happened to stumble upon the possibility of registering my Dragon Age key codes within EA's Origin and after downloading and installing through that service I was actually able to set the flag and still start the game.Seems Origin itself has a less restricted/adjusted version of the game files than Steam does. Nonetheless I wasn't eager enough up to now, to observe whether the undesired game behavior changes or not. Yes, anyone with a legitimate installation of the game can switch to the EA/Origin store digital download simply by choosing the 'Redeem product code' option and entering the CD-key.
(Thanks for the reminder, excretumnecris!) I did this for fall five of my BioWare games (already had the retail disc versions) when I built my current Win8 machine.And yes, once you're no longer using Steam as the minder for your game's patching (although there many are good reasons for some people to do so) you can edit the daorigins.exe file header to make it 'Large Address Aware'.See my post from over three years ago: step-by-step with a link to the original FO3 batch file on the Nexus! For all of you who have a Steam-bought Dragon Age Origins key and want to test the possibility of LAA on the executable, this might be interesting:I happened to stumble upon the possibility of registering my Dragon Age key codes within EA's Origin and after downloading and installing through that service I was actually able to set the flag and still start the game.Seems Origin itself has a less restricted/adjusted version of the game files than Steam does. Nonetheless I wasn't eager enough up to now, to observe whether the undesired game behavior changes or not. Yes, anyone with a legitimate installation of the game can switch to the EA/Origin store digital download simply by choosing the 'Redeem product code' option and entering the CD-key. (Thanks for the reminder, excretumnecris!) I did this for fall five of my BioWare games (already had the retail disc versions) when I built my current Win8 machine.And yes, once you're no longer using Steam as the minder for your game's patching (although there many are good reasons for some people to do so) you can edit the daorigins.exe file header to make it 'Large Address Aware'.See my post from over three years ago: step-by-step with a link to the original FO3 batch file on the Nexus!