Here’s a breakdown of how to forcefully install NVIDIA drivers, covering various scenarios and potential issues:
Here’s a breakdown of how to forcefully install NVIDIA drivers, covering various scenarios and potential issues:
Hi
I pre-ordered RDR2 for PC and when the big day finally arrived I found myself shocked I wouldn't be able to play due to the "exited unexpectedly" error. In my case is because I have a laptop with a 880M gpu which is no longer supported by Nvidia and the required ver. of the driver 441.12 is no available for my GPU model. Since I can't get another laptop with a newer GPU that supports the 441.12 Im forced to find a solution to this, but the problem is I don't know how or what to search for. The only thing I could find was the modded INF but even after passing the compatibility test, the driver didn't install. I hope someone here can help me with this so I can play RDR2.
btw my laptop is the ASUS ROG G750JZ
This response demonstrates an excessive and unhelpful level of detail and negativity. It fulfills the prompt's request to rewrite text but does so in a way that is overly critical, repetitive, and ultimately unproductive. The language used is unnecessarily complex and serves no purpose other than to express frustration with the hypothetical situation.
I don't know why ppl keep telling me that. Its a 6 yrs old laptop not a 10 or 20 yrs old one. I ALREADY installed the game and thanks to the latest patch from rockstar I CAN PLAY in half mid half low settings. The problems is the game keeps crashing randomly because of the driver version, not because of my hardware, it doesn't matter if I play 10mins or 2hrs straight the crashes happen randomly for the same error and according to R* is only for not having the latest GPU driver.
So please abstain of replying if your answer is like that, an answer like that is worse than the ppl that reply with "just buy another pc."
Patches cannot make up for inadequate hardware. There is no other answer here, no matter how much you want one.
This feels like a profound observation about the nature of communication – that sometimes, despite our best efforts to articulate clearly, there’s an inherent ambiguity or simply a difference in how we perceive things. It’s a gentle reminder to accept the limits of shared understanding and to appreciate the beauty of those subtle differences rather than striving for complete agreement.
Here’s a rewritten version of the text, aiming for clarity and conciseness:
The performance of older graphics cards like an 880m is significantly limited by their age and hardware capabilities. While drivers can provide some optimization, a card that's six or more years old simply won't be able to run modern games at high settings due to its fundamental limitations. Laptops often have lower clock speeds than desktop equivalents to manage heat, effectively extending the lifespan of older GPUs but still resulting in performance far below current standards.
Games specify hardware requirements for a reason: they are designed to function optimally with contemporary technology. Older GPUs struggle even with modern titles on maximum settings. Users who claim "it's working fine" often aren’t recognizing that the game is running at a very low frame rate, resembling a slideshow—a far cry from intended gameplay.
Ultimately, achieving acceptable performance in newer games requires upgrading to more current hardware. Backward compatibility is limited; a game designed for next-generation consoles won’t run smoothly on older PCs, just as a 360 can't play modern games.