Delete Origin cache on a different drive
Hello,
I recently upgraded my computer to have Windows 10 and a 240gb SSD (C drive), and secondary 2tb HDD (D drive) have directed the installation of both my Origin app and games to my big D drive due to it much larger capacity. The questions I have are:
- How often must I delete my Origin cache?
- Since I have everything directed to my D drive do I need to find the cache files on the D drive, or will the automatically be stored on my C drive in the Program Data and App Data directory files respectively? This coincides to question 3 as well.
- Recently when I was having difficulty getting my Origin app to work properly on my PC, I found and deleted the cache files (NOT the Local Content folder) on my C drive with hidden files turned on. This worked, but now I'm worried if there are additional cache files on my D drive where everything is installed.
- If there are additional cache files in D, how do I check them? I only know the steps to open those folder directories as aforementioned via C drive. I seem to go cross-eyed when it comes to a secondary drive, because since forever I have always used a single drive until my recent PC upgrade.
- I have directed my Origin app to save and install games and expansions, moving forward on my D drive. Will Origin leave additional stuff on my C that needs to be deleted?
- This coincides with question 5 - I've been downloading my recently purchased Sims 4 expansions, etc and am not entirely clear as to where they are truly installing. In Sims 3 the folders were automatically named clearly upon downloading and installing them. Sims 4 is not that user friendly even when you try to save Sim households, but that's another story. What I need to know is how to confirm that, after I have directed everything to D, that the expansions are indeed going there.
- This coincides to all the above questions. I already have directed and set my windows 10 to save downloads and everything to my D drive. It was in default to C, and I'm so new to all this. I even directed the User, Documents and downloads on C to be automatically sent to D.
If you are confused with these questions I apologise. I'm a total noob at multiple hard drives, so please bear with me. I just don't want anything to go in my C drive. Call it OCD if you like. 😉
@kittell17 What I meant about transferring the install files was that you could download the game on another computer—a laptop, a friend's system, even one at the library if they let you—then copy the files to a USB, then copy them to your own computer, and let Origin find the files rather than downloading everything. But it sounds like that's a moot point for now, which is great to hear.
For the pack, there are plenty of websites that list them out by release date, so you can see that EP03 is City Living or whatever. I usually just google and jump to the Wikipedia page:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sims_4#Expansions,_add-ons_and_editions
If you're missing any packs, you can manually start the download through Origin: click on the Sims 4 icon in your game library, select More > Expansion Packs (or Game or Stuff Packs), scroll through the list, and find the one(s) that haven't downloaded. Any you own should have an orange Download button.
As for the household files, I think you're referring to the Tray entries? I sort them by last modified date, so I know what goes with what. But then my Tray folder doesn't have that many files, so it's easier to keep track of everything. You could also copy the files into (properly named) subfolders somewhere else, and copy files from these backups into your main user data folder when you want to use something in-game. But I agree, it's more of a hassle than it needs to be.