![]() ![]() Increased Glitterbeard's HP and Dexterity and gave him the Shield spell.Increased Isobel's AC to restore the intended balance.Fixed a bug that would let you use the Hide action outside of your turn in combat.Spoiler: Fixed the camera not working correctly in combat with Ansur.The guards in the Counting House will now continue pursuing you through the vault room.Spoiler: Fixed the cultists in the Temple of Bhaal reacting strangely to Wild Shaped characters in combat.Wyll now correctly recognises and confronts Karlach when you speak to him with a Karlach avatar after another avatar has already spoken to him.Fixed some visual artefacts appearing on split-screen when using Vulkan.Fixed the Hireling UI from being split in half on each monitor in splitscreen.Fixed a crash that would occur when selecting a summon without a hotbar while a deck in the hotbar was maximised.Fixed a cross-save issue causing you to get stuck syncing indefinitely, which prevented saving and loading.Fixed an edge case issue preventing you from initiating a Long Rest.Fixed an issue with spell slots that would prevent you from levelling up while multiclassing.To fix it, remove the ATA/IDE/ATAPI controller ( not the optical drive), reboot and let windows redetect it. This makes sense for HDD, but not so much for optical media. The problem (I won't call it a bug because they haven't fixed it since at least XP) is that the counter is never reset. Windows keeps track of read errors on a counter and when certain thresholds are met, it steps back the transfer speed. If you cannot figure out which controller, sort the list "View > Devices by connection" The way to check this is to go into the device manager and identify the ATI/IDE/ATAPI controller that the optical drive is attached to ( not the optical drive itself), and look for the transfer mode (advanced settings tab, check "Current Mode" column). I had this exact symptom once with Elder Scrolls Oblivion Most likely, your optical drive's DMA mode is in "PIO fallback mode" this is a severe compatability fallback that breaks discs that have purposely-built bad sectors in them (part of a copy protection mechanism). ![]()
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