


I was talking from my experience earlier. Sometimes when you run a program, things happen that you don't know about. The install sizes are slightly larger under DOS. * Humongous (650 megs: installs everything!)

* Large (266 megs: adds creature graphics and animations) * Small (2 megs: executable, config and support files) The various installation levels will install larger versions of the Recommended systems (both DOS and Win95): Monitor and video card capable of displaying 640x480 256-colorsĥ megs of hard drive space (plus space for save games) There's a Windows and a DOS installer on the same disk. ^_^įinding the "original" DOS Fallout is pretty much impossible. Have fun, and enjoy your DOS version of Fallout. So if you want sound, you may have to tinker with the DOSBox settings. In DOSBox, cd to the Fallout folder, and type "Fallout". Change the value of "art_cache_size" to "5".Ĩ. Open the Fallout.CFG in your Fallout folder. Open your DOSbox configuration file, and change the value of "memsize" to "32".ħ. Your Fallout folder should look something like this: Download hmidrv.386 () and place it in the Fallout folder. Download hmidet.386 () and place it in the Fallout folder. It needs to be where your fallout exe files are located, in the main folder.Ĥ. Download dos4gw.exe () and place it in the "Fallout" folder. Extract the contents of the archive, and copy all files into your fallout folder. This will patch the game, but will also contain the DOS version of the fallout executable.Ģ. Just the original Fallout patch, and some system files. Plus, this requires no warez, or illegal files. I've decided to write a very detailed tutorial. However, with the help of some forums online, there is a way to "convert" a regular windows version of Fallout, and use it in DOSbox. It seems finding the original DOS version is impossible. Even to the point of searching for the original DOS version of Fallout. I have seen this question multiple times around the internet.
