To be fair, it's not the first time articles have been made about GfW failing, and it won't be the last.hansari said:One author on The Escapist had a problem with GFWL and now so many of its readers are refusing to get it just based on that experience. Funny stuff.
Ah but see that's the problem I am 18 and have been for about 6 months. Yet the parental restrictions are still there. In fact I had to make a new account on GFWL just so I can accept and add people as friends. That is a dire failure in the workings of the system if you ask me.GamesB2 said:Yeah there are still age restrictions on games, you need to be 18 to purchase older rated games from the client.Glademaster said:Well my thing is less to do with the actual Client(well the main one). It is a problem with the actual account side with parental control which shouldn't even be active given that I am 18. Basically to play ages ago you needed to be 18 to make an account(what a detereent that has been to people on XBL) and I had a friend be my guardian since I was not at home at the time. For some reason I couldn't add friends and they wouldn't believe in an email I was 18 to remove parental restrictions and the phone numbers provided are either not for country or no longer in service.
It seems to generally work a bit better now... I have an under 18 account and I can still use most of GFWL features without problem.
Definitely so, try sending a report using the feedback button on the GFWL client (every little bit helps) and have you tried contacting Xbox support on Twitter?Glademaster said:Ah but see that's the problem I am 18 and have been for about 6 months. Yet the parental restrictions are still there. In fact I had to make a new account on GFWL just so I can accept and add people as friends. That is a dire failure in the workings of the system if you ask me.
Well I sent an email to support and they said that I need to ring them. Although the numbers they gave me wouldn't work. I might try that but the only thing is I already have my new account settled and the friends are already on that. Thanks for the help anyway.GamesB2 said:Definitely so, try sending a report using the feedback button on the GFWL client (every little bit helps) and have you tried contacting Xbox support on Twitter?Glademaster said:Ah but see that's the problem I am 18 and have been for about 6 months. Yet the parental restrictions are still there. In fact I had to make a new account on GFWL just so I can accept and add people as friends. That is a dire failure in the workings of the system if you ask me.
As it's a Live profile they may be able to help.
No problem, I want to see GFWL get better but that could still take some time... I send feedback if anything goes wrong and I tweet to Windows Gamer and GFWL on twitter a lot.Glademaster said:Well I sent an email to support and they said that I need to ring them. Although the numbers they gave me wouldn't work. I might try that but the only thing is I already have my new account settled and the friends are already on that. Thanks for the help anyway.
I can figure it out but it can't figure out how to tell the difference in space. I tried installing Age of Empire 3 on my laptop which had 6 gigs of space free. The game was under 3 gigs, yet it kept telling me I had no room for it.Sober Thal said:Yep, 80 MS points. Great deal.
EDIT: I love how so many people can't figure out GFWL, it really makes me feel like some sort of genius.
Maybe I'm thinking of something else... but sometimes programs you have (such as anti-virus, any kind of third party monitoring programs) will require a certain amount of space kept free.Beastialman said:I can figure it out but it can't figure out how to tell the difference in space. I tried installing Age of Empire 3 on my laptop which had 6 gigs of space free. The game was under 3 gigs, yet it kept telling me I had no room for it.
It might be Avast, but the more annoying part is that I have my harddrive split up into two partitions. One had 24 gigs free when I tried to download it onto their. Wouldn't let me, I guess I'll try on my desktop.GamesB2 said:Maybe I'm thinking of something else... but sometimes programs you have (such as anti-virus, any kind of third party monitoring programs) will require a certain amount of space kept free.Beastialman said:I can figure it out but it can't figure out how to tell the difference in space. I tried installing Age of Empire 3 on my laptop which had 6 gigs of space free. The game was under 3 gigs, yet it kept telling me I had no room for it.
It might not be that but 6GB is not much room for a PC/Laptop so who knows... have you tried running a defrag scan?
Given that I paid ten cents and had incredibly mild difficulty (similar to what Shamus had really), I'd say it was worth it given that I still spent perhaps 20 minutes on the problem. In exchange for 10 cents and 20 minutes, I got a game that would have easily cost me more in time and money elsewhere.cursedseishi said:Considering how much trouble 1 person had to make a 10 cent game work... haha... no thank you, I'd hate to see the kind of trouble a $1 game would bring. My computer would be out of commission for a week.