Hi
@Fernik , after your reply I tried to run it on Windows 7 in a VM, but it still didn't work. Later, I found out that something was wrong with my disk mounting. I reinstalled it, and then it worked fine. One thing I noticed is that in Windows 7 the resolution looks much better compared to Windows 11.
Thanks for the repost
@Nihonjaki90
That's good to hear, I'm surprised it worked over Windows 11, back in the day I remember reading so many complaints about old Complet's games not working on Windows 8 and Windows 10, that's also the primary reason that made Complet's to remade some of their games in the newer Kirikiri engine that worked fine under windows 10.
I'm not using Windows11, since my Everyday Laptop and PC doesn't "Officially" supports my hardware, and also I don't like the Spyware AI slop that comes bundled with Win11, I'm still running Win10 IoT LTSC until the 2032.
For old games I have dedicated E-waste PCs for running on them (these machines are so old that many consider them garbage with no value, so you can build them and don't expend too much money if you keep them basic):
Rig 1:
Dell Inspiron 530s (Socket LGA 775).
OS - Windows XP Professional SP3, fully updated.
CPU - Intel Core 2 Duo E8400 @ 3.00 Ghz (2 Cores, 2 Threads).
RAM - 4GB DDR2 800.
GPU - AMD Radeon R7 250 with 2GB of GDDR3 RAM (Low Profile)
Sound Card - Sound Blaster X-Fi XtremeGamer (SB0730) (Low Profile).
Storage: 2TB 7200 RPM HDD.
Rig 2:
Dell Optiplex 7010 (Desktop Version) (Socket H2, LGA 1155).
OS - Windows 7 Ultimate SP1, fully updated.
CPU - Intel Xeon E3-1240 @ 3.40 Ghz. (4 Cores, 8 Threads)
RAM - 32GB DDR3 1600.
GPU - Nvidia GTX 750Ti with 4GB of GDDR5 RAM (Low profile).
Sound Card - ASUS Xonar DS 7.1 with DD 5.1 and DST Connect real time encoding (Low Profile, PCI).
Storage - 128GB SATA SSD for OS, and 2 TB 7200 RPM HDD for everyday files.
Since both are low profile desktops, they don't use that much space, have in mind that I got the barebone machines, and I upgraded them with the specified parts a few years ago, some before and between the COVID, Etherium Craze and AI RAM failure, so some parts were quite cheap (The 750Ti and the HDD were the most expensive if I recall).
But they're great machines for retro content and using their features are quite worth (Playing the Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion on that Inspiron 530 wih EAX 4.1 is eargasmic).