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This article is written in the real world perspective.


For crashes that can occur in The Sims games itself, see Game crash.


A Crash To Desktop (or CTD) is a computer program crash which is said to occur when a program (especially a video game) unexpectedly quits, abruptly taking the user back to the desktop. Usually, the term is applied only to crashes where no error is displayed, hence all the user sees as a result of the crash is the desktop. Many times there is no apparent action that causes a CTD. During normal function, the game may freeze for a shorter period of time, and then close by itself. Also during normal function, the game may become a black screen and play the last few seconds of sound (depending on the size of the data buffer) that was being played repeatedly before it crashes to desktop. Other times it may appear to be triggered by a certain action, such as loading an area.

The CTD bugs are considered particularly problematic for users. Since they frequently display no error message, it can be very difficult to track down the source of the problem, especially if the times they occur and the actions taking place right before the CTD do not appear to have any pattern or common ground.

Causes[]

A CTD can happen in games of The Sims series for multiple reasons:

  • Hardware incompatibilities
  • Just barely reaching minimum requirements for the game (2 GB of RAM for TS3, integrated graphics etc.)
  • Too powerful machine (Using more than 2GB RAM and/or a 64-bit operating system)
  • Incompatible or corrupt mods/custom content
  • Corrupted data
  • Too many background applications running at the same time
  • Data Execution Prevention (DEP) might close programs that 'use system-reserved data' incorrectly. This feature might have been added to Windows as another layer of virus protection. However, when this is the case, there will usually be a small window in the bottom-hand corner mentioning it.

Solutions[]

Some users have CTDs because of user-hardware incompatibilities: their machine only reaches the minimum requirements (and they have their settings too high), their machine has too much RAM (fixing this requires modding the .exe to support the full 4GB address space), their machine uses too new parts (requiring editing the configuration files to make the game detect the hardware properly), and other less common (and more difficult to fix) hardware issues. Crashes may also be caused by incompatible mods that have been installed, or other user-software changes, or, in The Sims 3, letting the game run without a frame-limiter, as it can cause the GPU to overheat and crash.

For turning off DEP for your programs, see Turning Off DEP.

ModTheSims has created this help thread (Please note that EA or The Sims Studio does not support this as support is provided by ModTheSims), with tips on addressing bugs that cause CTDs.

Mod Conflicts Detector is a software that can be used in order to properly identify the corrupted custom content that is causing the CTD in The Sims 4.

Wikipedia logo silver This page uses content from Wikipedia. The original article was at Crash to desktop. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with The Sims Wiki, the text of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 license.


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