On a side note I wonder if I can find my old star wars rebellion cd somewhere.
There's a reason why GOG is so popular - they actually put in an effort to repackage the games so they work reasonably well on modern systems whereas Steam often just boot them out "raw" with often little more than a stock DOSBox link and a variable quality community "go fix it yourself" page. GOG's community forums and tech support are pretty good too with many common problems having known workarounds. PCGamingWiki is another good resource. I dare say joystick problems in Star Wars were due to old games being hard-coded to look for old joysticks (remember the pre-USB dedicated "Game Ports" you found on discrete sound cards?) If a game supports keyboard input, you may be better off disabling joystick input and using a gamepad to emulate keystrokes via xpadder.Recently tried playing The Xwing and Tie fighter games from back in the 1990's. Downloaded via steam...and the games don't work at all. When they do ok,things like joysticks don't work. It is too much trouble.
well, in case not you can always get it again for a whopping whole $1 along with a bunch of other games...
https://www.humblebundle.com/star-wars
Anyone know if that SW humble bundle is just via steam or also have direct download versions?
The games are worth the effort. GoG does make it a LOT easier though.![]()
You already have your answer but when you're looking at a bundle scroll down to "read more" and expand the text. Click on the "here" full system requirements link and it will show you the drm requirements for each game. In this case it says Windows with a Steam symbol next to it.Anyone know if that SW humble bundle is just via steam or also have direct download versions?
Man I want to go play Full Throttle again now thinking about old Lucas Arts games...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kYCTjRBdir0