

Now you’ll be lucky if stores have any laptops which if they do chances are it’s junkware.

If you were to buy a computer when BFME2 came out they were advertised as 32 or 64 back when you could read the specs of it and do comparing. Just a year or two after that the 64 bit computing was pretty much standard unless you were an old dinosaur that refused to upgrade and now a lot of emulator people are finding out their computers are not 64 bit compatible which I was shocked to find they still had them. The few who could play BFME2 had to turn graphics all the way down unless they had a 800$ gaming rig or performance issues would pop up all over the place. When BFME 1 and ESPECIALLY 2 were released most people were lucky if they could get the damn demo to even install let alone actually do any gameplay without serious performance problems. 64 bit already existed but was resisted for a long time like going to HD TV where you can’t use rabbit ears anymore. Computers at that time *early 00s* were going to 64 bit. It’s because of bad timing on release dates. Please let me know if you have any questions. The name of the file must be “options.ini”.ģ) You can adjust the resolution (where it says UltraHigh) to fit your own screen, for example Low.

If you experience the same problem, here is a solution which worked for me:ġ) Open Notepad or a similar text editor and insert the following lines:Ģ) Save the file to the directory “AppData\Roaming\My Battle for Middle-earth Files\”. The game crashed with the following message: “EXCEPTION_ACCESS_VIOLATION” The installation process went well, but the game refused to run properly afterwards. I use Windows 8 on my PC (with a patch so that I get the “normal” Windows desktop), but did not give it much thought. Recently I decided to fire up the classic RTS-game Lord of the Rings: Battle for Middle Earth from EA Games.

Wallpaper – Lord of the Rings: Battle for Middle Earth
