![]() Tomorrow I’ll try launching it via CC Magic, and if that works I’ll start pushing a little CC into my folders, to see if it can handle that. I’ve also just tried launching it via Steam (as that’s how I have it installed) for now, and I managed a couple of hours of gameplay. It runs well enough that way with no CC other than a couple of essential NRaas mods, but I’ve not yet tried it with a bunch of CC. (Instructions are here if you’re not sure what to do.) You have to run the script every single time before you launch the game, and apparently it fixes the issue by limiting the game to only one CPU core while it loads, then - once it’s loaded - reinstating all the CPU cores. Find it on the second post of this page, if you encounter the same issue and need a fix. Thankfully, a user named Miaa245 wrote a PowerShell script that fixes the issue. Part of the problem is that there isn’t a team at EA responsible for upkeep on Sims 3 in general: the development team was disbanded back in 2013 or so.” They’ve been aware of it since January 2022, when - according to the users of their help forum, “The only news we’ve received from EA is that someone is looking into it. ![]() ![]() That is, the CPU in my new PC is an Intel 12th Gen ('Alder Lake’) processor, and it turns out that… EA haven’t fixed a specific issue. No error messages it just closed.Īfter a lot of frustrated (and increasingly frantic) googling, I found out why. The launcher would fire up, I’d click to play, and then it would close. I tried via CC Magic, I tried via Steam, I tried via the direct. exe file I ran, The Sims 3 simply wouldn’t start up. ![]() Well, I got CC Magic to actually stay open (see my previous post) but then I had an even bigger issue: no matter what I did, no matter which.
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