Running FreeDOS on real hardware can be challenging. If you only want to play Lure of the Temptress, on a mordern computer you have two options: * DOSBox * ScummVM
I would recommend to use ScummVM for playing old (and by ScummVM supported) click-and-point adventures. It integrates very well into modern operating systems (Windows, OS X, Linux) and doesn't have to emulate a DOS environment and x86 hardware. DOSBox will run almost all DOS games on various hardware and also runs on modern operating systems, even on other platforms (ARM, MIPS, PowerPC and more, additional to x86). FreeDOS on the other hand is a very old operating system concept. Running it on modern hardware will very often result in some features not working correctly. DOS games often required an AdLib or SoundBlaster audio card. For AC'97 and Intel HD-Audio sound, there are no DOS drivers that can emulate an AdLib or SoundBlaster card. The result is that on lots of hardware setups you will end up with a bootable FreeDOS with dozen of missing drivers, simply because of the comprehensible fact that those drivers would have to be programmed by the developers, which would cost a lot of money, and for an operating system that is almost no longer used by anyone, except some enthusiats. DOS driver development on modern hardware is just not viable. Good luck! Original message by Brandon Taylor, 2016-06-17 23:12: > I just acquired FreeDOS via Rufus, a program that lets me create bootable USB > drives. I’m trying to play some DOS games, such as “Lure Of The Temptress,” > but > the game won’t run – it says “Not enough memory to run the game.” As I have > not > had a lot of experience with the DOS family of operating systems (I was raised > on Windows), I don’t know what to do, if there’s anything I /can/ do, to get > this game to work. It sounds like a typical problem with DOS’s 640KB > limitation, > but I don’t know how to get around it. Can anyone help me out here? > > Brandon Taylor ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ What NetFlow Analyzer can do for you? Monitors network bandwidth and traffic patterns at an interface-level. Reveals which users, apps, and protocols are consuming the most bandwidth. Provides multi-vendor support for NetFlow, J-Flow, sFlow and other flows. Make informed decisions using capacity planning reports. http://sdm.link/zohomanageengine _______________________________________________ Freedos-user mailing list Freedos-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/freedos-user