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@Pooka20 Please start with a couple of basic checks of your Windows system files:
- Hit Windows key-X
- Choose either “PowerShell (Administrator)” or “Windows Terminal (Administrator),” whichever option is offered
- Inside the window that appears, copy and paste “DISM.exe /Online /Cleanup-image /Restorehealth” without quotes, and enter
- The system will start validating soon. If it throws an error, please list it here
- After it reaches 100%, hit Windows key-X again
- Again, choose “PowerShell (Administrator)” or “Windows Terminal (Administrator)”
- Inside the window, copy and paste “sfc /scannow” without quotes, and enter
- Post the message you receive here
Restart your computer, hit Windows key-i, select Update & Security, and click the box to check for updates. If any install, restart again afterwards.
It's worth trying to run the game again after DISM and sfc. If it doesn't work though, which it might not, please do a clean uninstall and reinstall of the Intel graphics drivers. Here's how:
Use the drivers Asus provides for your laptop, which you can find here:
https://www.asus.com/us/supportonly/up6502zd/helpdesk_download/
Please also download the newest driver from Intel, the one labeled WHQL and dated July 19:
https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/products/sku/228342/intel-arc-a370m-graphics/downloads.html
Download both graphics drivers and the command center application. Install the driver with version number V30.0.101.1325 (the second one listed) first, restart, then install the other, then the command center app, then restart again. The reason for the two drivers if that your laptop has an integrated Intel chip and a dedicated card, and the drivers may not both support both GPUs. Asus's documentation is not clear.
It may be that these two drivers only support the integrated graphics chip, so while your computer is still offline, please find out whether Windows detects a driver for the Arc card. Hit Windows key-X, select the Device Manager, open the Display adapters section, right-click the Arc card, and select Properties > Driver. The driver version should be either 30.0.101.1325 or 30.0.101.1631 (or close enough; the last four digits should match at least). If it does, you're fine; go back online and test Sims 4.
If you don't see a driver, or see something about the Microsoft Basic Display adapter, install the driver you downloaded from Intel and restart again, then test the game. You can also install the Intel driver, and restart, if you get the same error as you were seeing originally.
@puzzlezaddict here's the info from the SFC. Thanks again for the help ☹️
- puzzlezaddict2 years agoHero+
@Pooka20 I take it the game didn't work after running DISM and sfc. Did you try the clean uninstall and reinstall of the graphics drivers? That's the next step here.
If that doesn't help, please post a new dxdiag.
- 2 years ago
@puzzlezaddict No, I think it's working! It's worked the first couple times I booted up the game, so hopefully it continues to work. Thank you so much for your help!
- 2 years ago
@puzzlezaddict Never mind it's not working. I want your opinion on this, the game runs with no CC. I added some and it still ran, then I added a little more and the game freezes on the load screen.
1. It seems like the game is setting a CC limit?
2. Or could it be that the game struggles with recognizing my video card? In the past the game will run fine, then occasionally it won't launch and display the "unrecognizable video card" error code. Do you know a way to get the game to recognize my video cards? Maybe that would resolve all my issues.
Thanks again for all you time 🙂
- puzzlezaddict2 years agoHero+
@Pooka20 Your graphics card not being recognized shouldn't have any bearing on this. But if you want to get the card recognized and see whether it helps, that's simple. I added both the integrated chip and the dedicated card to this file:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1n1pA375fZBRJbWlBHAPbhUoBuMP7yOCV/view?usp=share_link
Take the - off the name, so it's called GraphicsCards.sgr , and drop it in Documents > Electronic Arts > The Sims 4 > ConfigOverride. The game will use this file rather than the one in the program files, and you can delete this file any time you want to go back to using the original.
I still think this might be a custom content issue, but it might also be worth testing how the game runs on your computer's integrated graphics chip. Open Windows Settings, then System > Display > Graphics settings, click Browse, add TS4_x64.exe, click on it and select Options, then choose the power-saving option. That should list the Xe graphics rather than the high-powered one, which should list Arc graphics.
You can double-check that the game is now using your integrated (Xe) chip in config.log, after you've launched the game again of course. This is not a solution or even a good workaround, since the Arc card is so much faster than the Xe chip, but it would at least let you know whether the problem is with the Arc card or its driver rather than with Sims 4 or with something else on your system.
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