jaecorporation.blogg.se

Crazy taxi 3 pc directx 9
Crazy taxi 3 pc directx 9







crazy taxi 3 pc directx 9

I've seen this happen in other games.Īnytime i dealt with a game that ran at too high fps(or jumpy) and also did not allow me to change options to control it. Since it's (presumably) a very low demanding game, the CPU and GPU aren't being stressed enough to stay at their peak performance, downclocking itself randomly while playing. I haven't spent any time trying to fix this but forcing your GPU in 3D mode with the control panel and putting your power setting to performance might help. No idea if the game ran at 60FPS on the DC, but a steady 30FPS way is better than framerates being all over the place.Īnyways, I have the same issue, although not as bad. ZeRo|*Grizzledorf*:is it really that big of a deal? wouldnt the original on dreamcast be low fps? or did dreamcast actually run 60 fps? The game is commonly found under here if you're on a 32-bit version of Windows: Go into the x32 folder, and copy the d3d9-dll into the root of Crazy Taxi (Steam)'s installation folder where the executables are. Extract the contents of the *.tar.gz file with 7zip (found here [until you have the "dxvk-*" folder.

crazy taxi 3 pc directx 9 crazy taxi 3 pc directx 9

Download doitsujin's dxvk wrapper "dxvk-1_7_2_tar_gz" from Github here (the version I used was 1.7.2):ģ. Perform a clean install of the game through Steam.Ģ. Make the game run in the Vulkan API instead of DirectX 9.įor whatever stupid reason Sega's hack team of programmers behind this port butchered something with this game running under DirectX 9, but after wrapping the game to use Vulkan instead, I am getting a consistent and better performing frame-rate. I think I *may* have found a fix for the game's crappy performance issues and it doesn't require emulating the Dreamcast version as a replacemen, and it's so stupid too now that I'm thinking about it:









Crazy taxi 3 pc directx 9