Hey All,
I recently purchased a new rig, about to get wow going, is their any benefit to doing a fresh install/download or will copying the wow folder from my windows 7 to windows 10 PC and removing the cache folder do the trick?
Hey All,
I recently purchased a new rig, about to get wow going, is their any benefit to doing a fresh install/download or will copying the wow folder from my windows 7 to windows 10 PC and removing the cache folder do the trick?
Why don't you just do a fresh install? Why are you putting dirt on your new drive? Just backup addons if you want.
Thanks for the replies.
If your Internet is good, download and install via Battle.Net
Then copy/move saved stuffs
WoW tends to bloat over time as the game doesn't bother defragmenting or cleaning up its files. A fresh install will noticeably cut down the filesize.
There's a scan and repair option http://prntscr.com/d9j4pg . That one also apparently reduced the loading times, but maybe it's just placebo.
When i got my new PC i did a clean install even though i saved wow on an external HDD to copy it.
It's like a fresh start, which is really nice
___________( •̪●) --(FOR THE ALLIANCE!)
░░░░░░███████ ]▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▄▃
▂▄▅█████████▅▄▃▂
I███████████████████].
◥⊙▲⊙▲⊙▲⊙▲⊙▲⊙▲⊙◤...
Copy the WoW folder and then use the Repair function in the BattleNet launcher and it will replace any stray files and rebuild the necessary links etc. Just make sure the copies WoW is where Battlenet expects it to be,or it will try to download the lot again
If you have a fast, uncapped net connection then the cleanest option is just to reinstall it fresh. If you don;t then use the copy/repair technique.
The amount of bloat in Wow is ver small, it is mostly log files, previous patch files and caches. There is no fragmentation, fragmentation is when large files aren;t contiguously held on your hard-drive which can increase load times because (as it were) the system has to hunt for and load said large file in smaller pieces, that is nothing to do with Warcraft, if you have a mechanical drive you can defragment it with the utility Windows provides. Do not attempt to defrag a solid state drive because it is pointless and potentially imposes a lot of unecessary write cycles, increasing "drive wear" for no benefit whatever
I maintain getting an SSD is probably one of the best upgrades you can ever give yourself, the difference between SDD and mechanical drives is just amazing
I put windows 10 and m ymost used game by far which is Warcraft of the SDD. Loading screens in WoW are literally seconds , the load bar just zips across lol
You can get a good sized 240Gb SDD for about $60 or maybe less. You will love it forever
Last edited by mmoc7a6bdbfc72; 2016-11-20 at 11:08 AM.
Last edited by RobertMugabe; 2016-11-20 at 11:12 AM.
It's nonsense. Even if it were true, drive space is so cheap now it a couple of Gb here or there doesn;t matter at all
Last edited by mmoc7a6bdbfc72; 2016-11-20 at 11:09 AM.
Even better: it's almost 50GB by now ^^
- - - Updated - - -
Unnecessary.
- - - Updated - - -
I don't remember if the repair program removes addons. If yes, then it may improve loading times.
Otherwise, as far as I know (last time I used repair was in MoP, I think the battle.net launcher does this automatically) the repair program only replaced corrupted files from the /data folder, that's it. (dunno if this is still the case, but in like wrath times it used to only repair the 3.0 files and deleted every patch)
Sir, your installation is bloated. My recent fresh install is 40,2GB including addons.
A fresh install from time to time helps fix a lot of problems. Fragmentation of files being one. Files also get corrupted (and they aren't always instantly repaired).
If you have the connection for it, just do a fresh install overnight. Copy the Interface and WTF folder from the old installation.
Although not always needed, from personal experience, it is advised to delete the config.wtf file inside the WTF folder. Inside this file some settings tuned to your old hardware are saved, this can result in faulty settings for for instance your new videocard.
It shouldn't be bloated except if Blizz is lazy and they decide not to delete old files when a patch comes out. (afaik the background downloader cleans everything up after it finishes patching)
Also Addons and settings shouldn't usually make up more than 100mb.
Also there aren't any "faulty settings" in WoW. Replacing your gpus won't break anything(also afaik WoW doesn't target specific gpus and adds extra settings).
Last edited by RobertMugabe; 2016-11-20 at 12:11 PM.