

( It may sync the time to normal again, if so unselect-select Manual again and now it will keep the time as what you set)ħ - Open Firefox, and go to your flash site such as : Ĩ - Voilà! Music is there! and so your flash.

I tried with Linux Lite 4.6, it also works but don't use a higher version, they won't work.ģ - Create a new virtual machine (Linux, 64 bit) and select Linux Lite 4.0 (64bit).vdi as the "existing virtual harddisk file"ĥ - Login, go to the Menu, hover over "Settings", and then open "Time and Date"Ħ - "Unlock" and set the "Configuration" as "Manual". If you want VMware you can download VMware image too. I explained for virtual box but it is also doable for VMware.ġ - Go to and download and install Virtual BoxĢ - Go to and download and unzip Linux Lite 4.0 (Beware it is a 1.3GB download!!) Let me list all steps, total process takes around 15 mins (assuming you have a high speed connection)

which case the SimCoaster game refused to run past the loading opening doors animation LoneWolf4 Posts: 2 Joined: 24.Yes, there are virtual images that can do this. The true reason i'm doing this through a VM is because i tried this on windows 10 and it worked till the latest update. It seems to help the issue still remains that it won't get past booting up at all though becuase upon launch of the game it lowers the res and causes an infinite loading glitched screen

If anyone could offer any help it would be much appreciatedĬurrently i've changed some settings in the mid.low and high files under data. Simcoaster is one of the harder games to get working on an old OS system. with the display all glitches out, a reset seems to fix it but again the game still won't play after. my issue is that everytime the game runs it tries to shrink the res and this causes it to get stuck in a infinite loading screen. Need to play a Windows 98 game Just find a copy of Windows 98 and run it in Virtualbox With 3D acceleration support (for XP and later versions of Windows), in. Im trying to get the game SimCoaster to run on my VM.
