Simspulse
6 years agoRising Rookie
Realm of Magic Glitches
Sims get stuck in default pose, random dancing when sim transports, sims hand is deformed and many other glitches with the realm of magic. When will these bugs be fixed?
@kreatora As I said before I do not have mods on this computer. This is a newly installed game (all 32). I've repaired it even though it was not necessary. Glitches still exist although these problems do not bother me. It bothers my daughter. She refuses to switch to 4 because she thinks s4 is very glitchy/sloppy.
I appreciate your help but do not think this has anything to do with mods seeming as my 6-year-old doesn't use them. It is a fresh install of the game. Hopefully
EA will fix the sloppy rush job because I don't think she will continue to play and will stick to s2/s3. I would fix the problems myself via mods but do not think it's my job to polish an unfinished half baked GP.
Thanks though
@Simspulse
Is your game running on a 32-bit system?
If yes read here:
https://answers.ea.com/t5/General-Discussion-and-Feedback/The-Sims-4-Update-on-Supported-Systems/td-p/7629106#
The factory reset is not only to eliminate mods problem. This is done to eliminate the possibility that the cause of errors is in the game folder. If you don't have mods just skip this step about mods,
If the game has no errors in the new clean folder, it means something went wrong with the game files.
if it still has these faults, then you should look for the reasons on your computer
I don't even know if you're on PC or Mac
And these error causes are different - depending on the system.
Not current graphics and hardware drivers, background programs such as Discord and open graphics programs. Too little free space on C drive - should be at least 20GB, too little RAM to use for the game, failed Windows updates - if you have Widows, overheating hardware.
You should understand that before we start looking on the computer I wanted to eliminate the possibility that the reason is in the game files.
One reason is already found if the game works on 32 bits, it can result in such errors. The game can be changed to 64 bits in Origin, but it depends on your system. if your system works in 32 bits, then, of course, you can't do it.
Could you post your Computer's DxDiag? You can do it only if you have Windows system
To gather a DxDiag on your computer, please follow the steps here: https://help.ea.com/en-us/help/pc/how-to-gather-dxdiag-information/
You can attach the text file to your post directly in option "Reply" - not Quick Reply
@Simspulse I can't help with the issues that are likely bugs, but hopefully EA will sort these things out eventually. But addressing the obvious errors in your dxdiag may help with the lag, at the very least.
First of all, are you (or is your daughter) playing on battery? Even with a laptop set to performance mode, the game will still not run as well as when the laptop is plugged in, and some lag would be unsurprising.
A couple of the errors list NVCamera64.dll, which is part of Nvidia GeForce Experience and Ansel. Try disabling both and see whether the game runs any better.
If this doesn't help, the problem may be with the graphics card drivers. The BlueScreen code listed is usually related to a GPU driver, so a clean reinstall is the next step to try. I can see that you've installed the latest Nvidia driver, but with a laptop that has automatic graphics switching enabled, it's best to use drivers provided by the laptop's manufacturer, Acer in this case. Since the drivers need to work together, they're often tweaked to make the switching smoother. And of course you can always update the Nvidia driver again if necessary.
So if you're still seeing significant lag even after disabling GFE and Ansel, a clean reinstall of both the Intel and Nvidia drivers is in order. Here's how to do it:
First, download Display Driver Uninstaller from here:
https://www.wagnardsoft.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=2351
You can download both the Intel and Nvidia VGA drivers directly from the Acer product page for your model:
https://www.acer.com/ac/en/SG/content/support-product/7603?b=1
Next, take your computer completely offline—disable wifi and/or pull the ethernet cord—and double-click the DDU.exe. Take note of where the file will land, and click Extract. If it's easier, you can copy the path (ctrl-C) and then paste it (ctrl-V) into the address bar in a File Explorer window. Open the folder and then Display Driver Uninstaller.exe, and you'll get a message that you're not in Safe Mode. Click OK, then go to Options and enable Safe Mode dialog. Here's a screenshot of what your options should look like:
Close options, and the DDU, and then open the DDU.exe again. For launch options, choose "Safe Mode (Recommended)," and then click Reboot to Safe Mode (you'll need your password, so find it before rebooting). Once you login, you'll see this:
Choose GPU, then Nvidia, then click Clean and Restart. Your computer will restart in normal mode. Launch the DDU again, reboot into Safe Mode, and repeat the above steps, but this time, choose Intel instead of Nvidia in step 2.
After your computer reboots into normal mode, still offline, you can install the Intel driver, then reboot, and then install the Nvidia driver and reboot again. For the Nvidia driver, choose a custom install, and only install the driver and the PHYSX software, not GFE (at least for now).
If it helps, you can print this out, since you won't be able to go back online and have a look until you're done with the whole process.