F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Change installation location from C: to H: drive for DirectX 9.

Change installation location from C: to H: drive for DirectX 9.

Change installation location from C: to H: drive for DirectX 9.

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Katisakat
Junior Member
15
01-19-2021, 01:25 AM
#1
Hello! I'm working on Castle Crashers on a PC without admin rights. I have a pre-installed version that works fine, but I'm running into an issue. It's well known this machine is from a Programming School setup, and instead of the full system, I only have my own H: drive. My goal is to get the game running so I can play during free times. The challenge: I discovered a DX9 version I can download without admin access, but I'm not sure how to install it on my H: drive so it can locate the game files. Any suggestions? Thanks!
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Katisakat
01-19-2021, 01:25 AM #1

Hello! I'm working on Castle Crashers on a PC without admin rights. I have a pre-installed version that works fine, but I'm running into an issue. It's well known this machine is from a Programming School setup, and instead of the full system, I only have my own H: drive. My goal is to get the game running so I can play during free times. The challenge: I discovered a DX9 version I can download without admin access, but I'm not sure how to install it on my H: drive so it can locate the game files. Any suggestions? Thanks!

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dm20_tm
Member
227
01-22-2021, 08:38 PM
#2
It's more than just saving the file. After downloading, you must install DirectX and have admin rights. This isn't possible on a school computer—changes aren't allowed.
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dm20_tm
01-22-2021, 08:38 PM #2

It's more than just saving the file. After downloading, you must install DirectX and have admin rights. This isn't possible on a school computer—changes aren't allowed.

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WhoIsKiller
Member
135
01-24-2021, 09:44 PM
#3
Sure thing! Your reply was appreciated.
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WhoIsKiller
01-24-2021, 09:44 PM #3

Sure thing! Your reply was appreciated.

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DuckZi
Member
194
01-30-2021, 08:54 PM
#4
Haha, that post really got me chuckling. But seriously, the limits aren’t about stopping you from having fun—they’re meant to keep things safe and stop someone messing with the systems. This has happened before, even back when floppy disks were the norm, and a single game could cause massive chaos across the whole network.
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DuckZi
01-30-2021, 08:54 PM #4

Haha, that post really got me chuckling. But seriously, the limits aren’t about stopping you from having fun—they’re meant to keep things safe and stop someone messing with the systems. This has happened before, even back when floppy disks were the norm, and a single game could cause massive chaos across the whole network.

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Derpqatlumpkin
Junior Member
23
02-14-2021, 05:56 PM
#5
*** Thread is blocked *** Discussion about bypassing limits is not permitted.
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Derpqatlumpkin
02-14-2021, 05:56 PM #5

*** Thread is blocked *** Discussion about bypassing limits is not permitted.