Hi!
> I think it was a little controversial to load both of those drivers at > the same time. Maybe this is causing my problems? Not really. You need one driver to access the CD, for example UDVD2, and one driver to access the files on it, for example SHSUCDX, so you always need two drivers for your game. > I'm playing GTA1 and Redneck Rampage. These games have CD audio tracks. > GTA1 plays a static noise and RR detects the CD, but refuses to play > anything. Your problem seems to be related to copy protection. There was a discussion about this in 2021 where I wonder whether and which features available only in commercial drivers are required to make copy protection work. In other words, the suggestion was to use e.g. a driver from a Windows 9x boot disk instead of UDVD2 and see what happens. Back then, I was looking for people to help me by testing whether patching e.g. your OAKCDROM driver to remove one of the features: If that makes OAKCDROM behave like UDVD2 and your game refuses to play, then we know which feature would have to be added to UDVD2 to support copy protections :-) It surprises me that your OAK driver asks so many questions about the drive controller, but nothing worse than crashing should happen if you give the wrong answers. If you can confirm that your game works with another driver, then I would be happy to help you to selectively break that driver, as described above, to learn how to improve UDVD2 :-) Regards, Eric PS: The thread probably was around the beginning of June 2021. I have a copy of the 41302 byte 1998 OAKCDROM as reference. _______________________________________________ Freedos-user mailing list Freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user