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7 Replies
- Nyerguds6 years agoHero+
@N7_A_M_R_Egypt wrote:
I believe yes because Steam version requires linking an EA account to access multiplayer.
That was removed, actually. But yea, they should be able to play together.
Unfortunately I cannot confirm this. A friend on Origin tried to join my game (I'm on Steam) and vice versa. We could not find each others games in the lobby. How is this supposed to work?
If it is possible for Steam Players and Origin Players to join, I would like to know if there is any way to identify who's using what.
I can't use the Steam Client, and any IP Addresses associated with Steam tend to crash my games (assuming they even get that far). I would need to be able to filter out Origin Client Lobbies and prevent Steam Users from joining my games, as to not crash my Router.
It's been a thing in my case for years, and nothing will fix it (requires calling the ISP and going through a lot of menus and so on over a phone for hours). Steam got Black-Listed on my Router years ago, due to some Hacking incident involving the Steam Client and another User I think. Ever since, people using Steam on their systems have found themselves knocking my Router offline every time they join me Online (hard enough getting a stable game of Battlefield 4 with other users have both Steam and Origin active at the same time).
- Carbonic6 years agoHero+
@GENERALZOOL wrote:
If it is possible for Steam Players and Origin Players to join, I would like to know if there is any way to identify who's using what.
I can't use the Steam Client, and any IP Addresses associated with Steam tend to crash my games (assuming they even get that far). I would need to be able to filter out Origin Client Lobbies and prevent Steam Users from joining my games, as to not crash my Router.
It's been a thing in my case for years, and nothing will fix it (requires calling the ISP and going through a lot of menus and so on over a phone for hours). Steam got Black-Listed on my Router years ago, due to some Hacking incident involving the Steam Client and another User I think. Ever since, people using Steam on their systems have found themselves knocking my Router offline every time they join me Online (hard enough getting a stable game of Battlefield 4 with other users have both Steam and Origin active at the same time).
Erhm what? I'm sorry but this makes little sense.
- Steam IP addresses should not make any game crash - networking errors perhaps but never a crash
- If the router is blocking Steam IP addresses that should not crash the router, they should just be blocked
- Hacking incidents for other users should not affect your router, no one does this
- Battlefield 4 users don't transmit to your router that they also have Steam connected.
In short, the error, the explanation to why it's happening and the whole situation do not fit with how routers, the internet, computers and the games work.
I know, I did IT at collage, but that's what happens to me.
The only factors that are in effect when I get a particular type of crash on my PC is when I'm in a session with someone who's got Steam running on their system at the time. I know, as I tested it with a friend. My router goes down and has to be reset (denied power for 10 whole minutes, and then turned on again), and my game actually crashes saying 'This program has stopped working correctly' and this when I'm in a session with players on Steam. I don't understand why it happens, but the only common factor is the Steam Application.
By the way, I actually had it happen just a few hours ago, and I was able to confirm that one of the players had Steam running at the time (he forgot to turn it off before coming to play with me on Battlefield).
It happens to me, and I'm not the only one, though I will say, it's very extremely rare.
- psylentrage765 years agoSeasoned Adventurer@GENERALZOOL maybe start a thread for this. It's a brilliantly valid enough point, imho, to start a convo over
If your router blacklisted Steam then the router is most likely the cause of the problem. I can't imagine that it would be difficult to log into the router and clear that blacklisting, but if the router prevents access to something like that you shouldn't trust the router. That just sounds like some Big Brother control, which is only OK if you're the big brother.
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