14.05.2010, 11:13
Being with 4,09m you have pass your issue; but crash at 60% will happen again most likely someday;
so here it is: it is cause by an ... . ini file (mostly air.ini) which has a line (entry) that points to a MOD that doesn't
exist, the mod is not install where it should be, or the name of the mod has been changed from what it should be.
The issue is resolve by installing proper mod, or installing the mod properly, or removing the excess line in the ... . ini.
Sometimes a mod will require the most recent buttons to work.
So always install your mods one by one and test if it works; if you install a lot mods and crash, you'll have a hard time to
find the cause.
( ... . ini files in packs are tailored for the content these packs and should work; it is what you keep or what you add
that will get you in trouble; so a clean install means a clean install, packs require: DO NOT KEEP anything from before... )
Remember that any MOD his treated as a priority by the system; it replaces original program, it replaces the very content
of the packs. So if a MOD you install (or one that's already there) screws up, then it ends there: CTD.
so here it is: it is cause by an ... . ini file (mostly air.ini) which has a line (entry) that points to a MOD that doesn't
exist, the mod is not install where it should be, or the name of the mod has been changed from what it should be.
The issue is resolve by installing proper mod, or installing the mod properly, or removing the excess line in the ... . ini.
Sometimes a mod will require the most recent buttons to work.
So always install your mods one by one and test if it works; if you install a lot mods and crash, you'll have a hard time to
find the cause.
( ... . ini files in packs are tailored for the content these packs and should work; it is what you keep or what you add
that will get you in trouble; so a clean install means a clean install, packs require: DO NOT KEEP anything from before... )
Remember that any MOD his treated as a priority by the system; it replaces original program, it replaces the very content
of the packs. So if a MOD you install (or one that's already there) screws up, then it ends there: CTD.