If you do this as I have, you can even stream music while playing Civ 2 which makes up for the lack of music from the internet archive. Second, many old tablets had very little usable memory because they we designed to be running many basic aps in the background such that 75% of usable memory was already allocated. Looking around the forum, and elsewhere, it seems there are two culprits. Recently I discovered that while the utilities on the forum don't work, you can use a memory ap to free up as much as possible, thus the system is now 99% stable. I have playing for two weeks, but along the way I had crashes. My Nook is a very low end device basically disabled from using anything outside of Google, but still I found free ways to make it work.Īdditionally you can use a free Playstation 1 emulator and go that route too, but I have little knowledge on the methodology. Even if you can't "sideload" aps, you still can do it. It is not necessary to "root" your android to do this. In ten minutes, I was playing a game, downloading new maps and scenarios, and using the built in editor to make my own scenario. The second way is to use one of the WINE emulators to create a windows environment, then load Civ 2. That has worked for several, but not for me. This allows a base upon which to then load a free Windows 3.11 legacy OS. Many techheads could use dos emulators as aps. Which mean despite originally coming out in 1996, it is superior to strategy games today! Shocking,no? I'm creating the topic as obviously many people have played Civ 2 (nearly a million in the fanbase) and would like to play it since it still is actually better than 99% of the current strategy games for the Android market. I hardly expected it to be possible, but here is a general method by which any android capable tablet (even my old Nook HD which uses the oldest obsolete OS ice cream sandwich) can run Civ 2.
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