![]() You can put together a machine to run XP on for very little money, especially if you know where to look for used/unwanted parts. So my advice is dual boot with 32 bit XP on one partition(or HD), or have a 2nd computer with XP for older games, especially if you upgraded to 64 bit like I did. I imagine 7 will be about the same.Īs for Vista, I consider myself wise to have just avoided it altogether my stepdaughter's Dad bought her a laptop with it installed, and it's okay. This new chapter in the Call of Duty® franchise features a new dynamic where players are on the side of a crippled nation fighting not. In 2002 Windows XP would totally reject any and all attempts of mine to install Tomb Raider 2 through 5(for example), but after the 2nd service pack it had no problem. Outnumbered and outgunned, but not outmatched.Call of Duty®: Ghosts is an extraordinary step forward for one of the largest entertainment franchises of all-time. Windows 7 is still too new, and just like XP back in 2001/2002, it's having it's bugs/issues. I don't recommend upgrading to Windows 7 w/o having a machine(or dual boot) with XP on it anyway. Oh well, I've got 3 old computers all running XP, so for me it's a non-issue. The German installer worked flawlessly for me in 32 bit Windows XP(no crashes, no errors, any resolution worked fine), but even if I use the compatibility tool still Windows 7 spits it up and laughs about it. ![]() ![]() Cool I can post a reply! I googled this because I have Windows 7 Pro 64 bit and my computer spits the German Phantasmagoria back at me like a baby being fed strained squash.
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