I have this problem where if I play for a couple hours or more, depending on what I’m doing on the game, my pc crashes. There is no error message and it just shuts out of the game and goes to origin. Currently I’ve not been doing any actual gameplay, just creating sims and furnishing lots, and it still happens.
It is manageable if I save often and exit and come back in, but it is quite frustrating. I have a fair bit of CC and a lot of store content, and I usually play with all but 2 stuff packs (because who really ever plays with Katy Perry sweet treats...). I clear my cache files before every game.
I know Sims 3 is a dysfunctional game, but I was wondering if there was a problem I could fix with this one. I bought a desktop which somebody built so I could play games more easily, but it still crashes. Granted, it’s FAR better than playing on a Mac!
My PC specs:
Intel Core i5, 16GB RAM, 480GB SSD, Nvidia GTX 1650 Graphics Card, Windows 10
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Beyond that, with lots of sim creating and CAS editing especially, you might be routinely exceeding the resource usage that the game can handle. It's still a 32-bit goose no matter how we dress it up and it will never soar like a 64-bit eagle by today's standards. Do you check on RAM usage frequently throughout these gameplay/design sessions and are you typically anywhere in the danger zone of over 3.5GB of usage on TS3 alone before this happens? If RAM usage is not the issue, we also offer this page full of tips and tricks to help the game's performance along, in case you are not familiar with it.
http://www.nraas.net/community/TIPS-FOR-BETTER-GAME-PERFORMANCE
By the way, I play on a Mac. But the trick there is that I don't play the actual Mac version of TS3 which is what is more crippled, like so many others I have Bootcamped Windows onto it and play the Windows version of the game on that side of things.
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I will say I have no idea what you mean by arranging for vertical sync and capping frame rates, so it would be helpful if you would explain that to me please! My technical abilities only go so far.
A good few years ago I downloaded bootcamp on my old Mac, and before that I added extra RAM to my computer. I found that I hadn’t allocated enough space to the bootcamp drive, and it was all a bit of a mess for me to do myself at the time. I have now bought this desktop which is a lot easier for me, and use my new Mac for general work things - as Macs most certainly weren’t built for gaming.
Thank you for taking the time to help me!
On the Nvidia Control Panel, on a profile for TS3.exe (for Patch 1.69) or TS3w.exe (with the "w" for 1.67) yes on Adaptive or On for vertical sync (whichever one works better) and also On for Triple Buffering. To find out what the refresh rate of your monitor is, right-click on the desktop, then Display Settings and Advanced. The Refresh Rate is one of about six things that show up there and it will be measured in Hz. That is the goal for the upper limit of frame rates (fps).
To see what you are actually getting in-game, Ctrl+Shift+C to bring up the cheats console, then type fps on (enter). As you play and move the game camera around, the displayed frame rate should never exceed 60 or whatever the Refresh Rate of your monitor is. To make the rate display go away, cheats console again and type fps off (enter).
If vertical sync isn't enough to lock things in, then we move on to adding an additional tool such as Nvidia Inspector to force the frame rate capping. This one requires a (free) download and install first though and is often but not always necessary. Note that vertical sync will never work in windowed mode, only in full screen, while Inspector will work on both.
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