7th Guest .... Cannot get it to run ....Hopless with DOS
7th Guest .... Cannot get it to run ....Hopless with DOS
Dear Gamers
Please can somebody help me. I just spent money on The 7th Guest, by Virgin, however, was not till I got home, that I noticed it was a DOS based game. I can never get any of my DOS games to run as I'm completely hopeless.
Anyway, I gave it my best shot and got the game installed without a hitch, but when it came to running the game from the DOS prompt (like it says in the book), I followed the instructions to the letter, but I just keep on getting....Bad Command Or Filename.
I run Win98 and the bloke at the computer shop says it will run on my machine, easy to say that when you know what your doing.
The only other thing I can tell you is that, when it asked me to enter a directory for the game during setup, I did not know what that meant, so I typed in windows for the directory.
Please can someone help me out here, I'm desperate and about to toss what looks like a great game into the bin.
I DO have it on the hard drive, so is there any other easy way of running this game. If not could I please have some SIMPLE and easy to follow instructions for DOS with this game.
Mind you have followed the manual's instructions to the letter and it's easy to follow.
Any help and/or tips would be great
Thanks in advance
Please can somebody help me. I just spent money on The 7th Guest, by Virgin, however, was not till I got home, that I noticed it was a DOS based game. I can never get any of my DOS games to run as I'm completely hopeless.
Anyway, I gave it my best shot and got the game installed without a hitch, but when it came to running the game from the DOS prompt (like it says in the book), I followed the instructions to the letter, but I just keep on getting....Bad Command Or Filename.
I run Win98 and the bloke at the computer shop says it will run on my machine, easy to say that when you know what your doing.
The only other thing I can tell you is that, when it asked me to enter a directory for the game during setup, I did not know what that meant, so I typed in windows for the directory.
Please can someone help me out here, I'm desperate and about to toss what looks like a great game into the bin.
I DO have it on the hard drive, so is there any other easy way of running this game. If not could I please have some SIMPLE and easy to follow instructions for DOS with this game.
Mind you have followed the manual's instructions to the letter and it's easy to follow.
Any help and/or tips would be great
Thanks in advance
- 486 player
- Gaming Demi-god
- Posts: 1228
- Joined: Wed Sep 18, 2002 6:32 am
- Location: Europe
Startup/Programs/MS-DOS prompt
Followin line's typed text. Press Enter after it.
dir *.exe
Pick one, which sounds like 7th Quest and type it. (And press Enter.)
It's recommended to simply press Enter when program suggestes installation directory onless thou wanna install it to another directory.
Followin line's typed text. Press Enter after it.
dir *.exe
Pick one, which sounds like 7th Quest and type it. (And press Enter.)
It's recommended to simply press Enter when program suggestes installation directory onless thou wanna install it to another directory.
Last edited by 486 player on Sun Jan 05, 2003 12:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.
NO Windows, NO DOSBox, DOS!
- John The Ax
- Moderator
- Posts: 1475
- Joined: Sun Sep 15, 2002 9:57 am
- Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Well, you installed it into your "windows" folder. This is generally a mistake, not deadly, but generally you want things in a seperate folder. When it said "directory", it meant the folder you wanted it in. You should (if you reinstall it) type in "7thguest" or something. If you use windows explorer, you can see your folders. Basically, just follow 486's advice. It's just a basic problem with lack of DOS prompt intelligence. Don't worry. You'll learn eventually.
youch!! put the disk into your computer and do an uninstall (if possible) if not, re-install the program into a new drive. Do a find for all the files in the new directory and delete any douplicate files that come up.
When you install it into a new folder C:\program files\7th guest just go into explore (right click on the START icon) and go to the new directory. To access your game, simply double click on the .exe file that looks like the one to run the game (prolly called either 7, 7th, guest, 7th guest, or run)
Richard
When you install it into a new folder C:\program files\7th guest just go into explore (right click on the START icon) and go to the new directory. To access your game, simply double click on the .exe file that looks like the one to run the game (prolly called either 7, 7th, guest, 7th guest, or run)
Richard
- John The Ax
- Moderator
- Posts: 1475
- Joined: Sun Sep 15, 2002 9:57 am
- Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Hi bonniescot,
like they say above it would be best to install the game to some other folder or directory than the Windows one.
The bad command or file name message means that DOS can't find the file you have typed in. Usually this is just because you haven't "navigated" the DOS prompt to the place where the game is installed. For example if you installed the game to a folder/directory you called "7guest" and the game's program file is called "guest" you would need to first navigate to that folder and then type the command.
To do this you need to start at the C:\> prompt. If there's anything after the "C:\>" then type in "CD\" (without the quotes) and hit the enter key. This will take you to the basic prompt.
Then type in the path and the file name you want to use. So in our example above you'd type in "c:\7guest\guest" and hit enter.
Of course since it is likely that you're running the game inside Windows you could always open My Computer and then open the C: drive, double-click the folder and then double-click the game's program (executable) file. This would work just as well.
Indeed, if that did work, you could just use the left mouse button to hold and drag the file to the Start Menu on the Taskbar or perhaps to the Desktop. You could then run the game by clicking the shortcut this creates.
Hope this is what you meant. Post again if you still have trouble.
like they say above it would be best to install the game to some other folder or directory than the Windows one.
The bad command or file name message means that DOS can't find the file you have typed in. Usually this is just because you haven't "navigated" the DOS prompt to the place where the game is installed. For example if you installed the game to a folder/directory you called "7guest" and the game's program file is called "guest" you would need to first navigate to that folder and then type the command.
To do this you need to start at the C:\> prompt. If there's anything after the "C:\>" then type in "CD\" (without the quotes) and hit the enter key. This will take you to the basic prompt.
Then type in the path and the file name you want to use. So in our example above you'd type in "c:\7guest\guest" and hit enter.
Of course since it is likely that you're running the game inside Windows you could always open My Computer and then open the C: drive, double-click the folder and then double-click the game's program (executable) file. This would work just as well.
Indeed, if that did work, you could just use the left mouse button to hold and drag the file to the Start Menu on the Taskbar or perhaps to the Desktop. You could then run the game by clicking the shortcut this creates.
Hope this is what you meant. Post again if you still have trouble.
<CENTER><A HREF="http://www.litepc.com/index.html"><IMG SRC="http://www.procerus.btinternet.co.uk/98 ... A></CENTER>
<CENTER>with <FONT COLOR=FF0000><B>629K</B></FONT> of free conventional memory in full DOS mode using QEMM 9.0<BR>(or 628K with <A HREF="http://www.uwe-sieber.de/umbpci_e.html">UMBPCI.SYS</A> providing real mode for <A HREF="http://members.aol.com/axcel216/speed.htm">FastVid</A>) with SmartDrive, CD-ROM,
<A HREF="http://cutemouse.sourceforge.net/">CuteMouse</A>, sound support and <A HREF="http://home.student.utwente.nl/r.muller ... Refresh</A> all loaded high.</CENTER>
<CENTER>with <FONT COLOR=FF0000><B>629K</B></FONT> of free conventional memory in full DOS mode using QEMM 9.0<BR>(or 628K with <A HREF="http://www.uwe-sieber.de/umbpci_e.html">UMBPCI.SYS</A> providing real mode for <A HREF="http://members.aol.com/axcel216/speed.htm">FastVid</A>) with SmartDrive, CD-ROM,
<A HREF="http://cutemouse.sourceforge.net/">CuteMouse</A>, sound support and <A HREF="http://home.student.utwente.nl/r.muller ... Refresh</A> all loaded high.</CENTER>
7th Guest in Windows
Do a search for the Windows update for 7th Guest I understand it works with XP however I KNOW it works well in Win98. Plays much faster, is stable and runs in windows.
7th Guest in Windows
Here is the link to play 7th Guest with DirectX:
http://www.tbyte.com/downloads/
I was told that the 7th Guest works with XP. I only tried W98 which worked better then DOS. Now if I could only get the 11th Hour to stop crashing back to the desktop with XP......
http://www.tbyte.com/downloads/
I was told that the 7th Guest works with XP. I only tried W98 which worked better then DOS. Now if I could only get the 11th Hour to stop crashing back to the desktop with XP......
Re: 7th Guest in Windows
That link doesn't work anymore. Any ideas where else I can get the updates from?Mike77 wrote:Here is the link to play 7th Guest with DirectX:
http://www.tbyte.com/downloads/
I was told that the 7th Guest works with XP. I only tried W98 which worked better then DOS. Now if I could only get the 11th Hour to stop crashing back to the desktop with XP......