![]() ![]() This affinity thing seems much cleaner to me, and it worked, so. Personally I did not try the other way of making it run (with the BIN32/64 folders taken from the warhead expansion. This game dont run in HD Last edited by Lerrandu 2:32pm Showing 1 - 2 of 2 comments McShave07 9:03pm Try looking at your game library and right clicking on Crysis. Oh, and don't install the GameSpy Comrade thing it's not necessary for the core game (it's just a multiplayer middleware) and the GameSpy servers are long offline. I swear i search the entire game and dont found a option to set my resolution to 1920-1080p. Why that is I do not know, but I extended the same rule to a 16 core processor, and it worked for me. And their examples also adhere to this rule. The initial post in this thread seems to follow the rule that the core 0 should never be used. (The Least Significan bit - LSB is always rightmost in binary, and core counting starts from 0) Which means that basically just core 0 will not be used, but all other cores will be used. in my case by specifying an affinity FFFE, I get in bynary: 1111 1111 1111 1110. on a 4 core system if you set the affinity to 3 (HEX) then you get in binary 0011 which means that cores 0 and 1 will be used and cores 2 and 3 will not be used. The /affinity command receives a parameter as HEX value, which converted into binary specifies to Windows which cores to use to run the game. After that the game runs nice with my native monitor resolution of 1920x1080. In order to get a resolution that does not appear in the game menu (1920x1080) I had to go to the Crysis folder in the Documents/MyGames folder on C and change the width and height parameters in the game.cfg file I found there. For me I had to use the command in initial post with affinity set to FFFE. ![]() From the menu options, choose “set as wallpaper.” Now decide whether you want to to use your new wallpaper as your home screen background, lock screen or both, and choose the appropriate option.I have a Ryzen 9 3950x on Windows 10 2004. Click on the image, then look to the upper right corner and click on the menu button (three vertical dots). Then open your gallery/photos app and from there open the “download” folder, where you will see the image you just downloaded. Now you will able to crop or arrange the image to your liking when it looks perfect, tap “set.” The only thing left to do is select whether you want the image to be your lock screen, home screen or both.and enjoy! Android: Choose one of our many exquisite wallpapers and download it by clicking on the yellow “download” button just below the image. Use the “share” button (looks like an arrow curving out of a box) and then select the “use as a wallpaper” button. Next choose “save image” from the options below, go to your Photos and find the image you just downloaded. Then tap on the image and hold for a few seconds. Now go back to your desktop and admire your new wallpaper! iPhone/iPad: Select a beautiful wallpaper and click the yellow download button below the image. On your computer, find the downloaded image and click on the photo. Then click Apple Menu > System Preferences > Desktop & Screen Saver > Desktop. ![]() Find the image on your computer, right-click it and then click “set as desktop background.” Now the only thing left to do is enjoy your new wallpaper! Mac: Find a wallpaper you love and click the blue “download” button just below. When you click the “download” button, the wallpaper image will be saved, most likely in your “downloads” folder. Just below the image you’ll see a button that says “Download.” You will also see your screen’s resolution, which we have figured out for you. ![]()
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