![]() A common practice back then that works if you have a 32 bit OS (like most people did 10 years ago), but it does not work on a 64 bit OS like most people have now. ![]() This is because the developers made the memory overflow in the PAGE memory, masking the leak. If you are old school like me and played the game back in 2009, you’ll know that it did not have that problem back then. This is a problem, as the Anno binaries are written in 32 bit: technically it can only see the first 4gb of RAM in your system. ![]() It all bears down to the fact that Anno 1404 has a rather severe memoryleak somewhere in it’s code (presumably texture related), and as a result it pumps unnecessary data into your RAM.
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