I don't know where to put this so I'll put it here on the off-chance it helps someone someday. Yesterday I discovered I couldn't run Star Citizen. The launcher starts fine, but clicking Launch Game did not work. I got just a loading screen. game would not run. I checked the RSI site, and sure enough there are a few issues surrounding this, but no advice other than than "do a clean re-install", which I had already done, twice.
I also found some information related to graphic driver and audio issues, that had similar symptoms.
Now, I've been around software long enough to know that computers do nothing randomly. They can't even generate random numbers randomly. Everything a computer does, is because a something told it to do it. So, if a program used to work, and now doesn't - then something changed. Most likely changes are from a very short list:
Reason why previously working software fails.
The first thing you should do in a situation where previously working software stopped working is to back out of any changes you've made to your system, software, or hardware.
My problem was software related, and possibly related to graphic issues, or audio issues (according to the kind of issues I read on RSI's website). All my graphic drivers and settings are the same as before, and the drivers are the latest. Oh bingo. On Thursday night I had installed Warzone 2100. It installs a 3D audio library called OpenAL. That was the only change on that computer, other than rebooting it on Saturday after Star Citizen failed to start.
Removing OpenAL fixed the problem with Star Citizen.
I also found some information related to graphic driver and audio issues, that had similar symptoms.
Now, I've been around software long enough to know that computers do nothing randomly. They can't even generate random numbers randomly. Everything a computer does, is because a something told it to do it. So, if a program used to work, and now doesn't - then something changed. Most likely changes are from a very short list:
Reason why previously working software fails.
- Your computer developed a hardware issue that is causing this behavior (unlikely but given enough users eventually...)
- You changed a setting that caused it. <== Number 2 reason. Usually changing a setting will not stop software from working, it just changes how it works.
- You installed some software that did it for you <== number 1
The first thing you should do in a situation where previously working software stopped working is to back out of any changes you've made to your system, software, or hardware.
My problem was software related, and possibly related to graphic issues, or audio issues (according to the kind of issues I read on RSI's website). All my graphic drivers and settings are the same as before, and the drivers are the latest. Oh bingo. On Thursday night I had installed Warzone 2100. It installs a 3D audio library called OpenAL. That was the only change on that computer, other than rebooting it on Saturday after Star Citizen failed to start.
Removing OpenAL fixed the problem with Star Citizen.