Simply rename the 64-bit exe to something else, and rename the duplicate 32-bit. If you are on Steam and the game still crashes, it may be because Steam launches the 64-bit executable by default.If you have some weird flickering, turn off vsync in the game's graphic options.Close the window, double click the shortcut in the Play on Mac/Play on Linux window and enjoy.Then on the "Miscellaneous" tab, click on "Open program's directory" browse to the banished install directory (if not on Steam, you should be right on it) and rename or remove the two VideoDX11 dll files (on't touch the VideoDX9 files !).In the window that opened, select "display" tab then change GSLS support to disabled (this is for the graphics glitch).Then, for both Steam and non-Steam, in the Play on Mac/Play on Linux window, select the shortcut you just created, then click on "configure" (not "settings") in the right column.Close the window, run Steam, install banished, close everything and return to the Play on Mac/Play on Linux window. In the Play on Mac/Play on Linux window select the Steam shortcut you just created, then click on "configure" on the right, and type "-no-dwrite" in the Arguments field (this corrects an error message you may have had, and corrects a graphical glitch on the Steam program itself). Once done, close it, Play on Mac/Play on Linux window will ask you to create a shortcut, choose the Steam.exe, click next, rename it into SteamBanished or something similar (if you install multiple Steam games, each one should require it's own virtual drive, meaning its own Steam, thats why renaming it is not stupid), click next, click "I don't want. But you should use the standalone version) - Download the Steam Windows Installer on the official Steam site first, then select the installer exe with the "browse" button, and let Steam install and update itself.
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