Run SETUP.EXE to install Blood Bath.

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If you have problems running Blood Bath, it may be because your video
card isn't VESA complient.

There is a shareware SVGA utility that provides VESA compliance for SVGA
cards that normally are not VESA compliant.  It is called SciTech Display
Doctor, and is available from http://www.scitechsoft.com/.  If you use it,
you should pay the shareware fee as described in the documentation.  If
you have a recent SVGA card you probably don't need SciTech Display
Doctor, although it may improve Blood Bath's performance.



If you have an S3 video card, there is another option.  A variety of
S3 based video cards have problems when the VESA mode switch call is
made, *if* the mode switch also requests that the screen be cleared at
the time of the switch.  Blood Bath does indeed make such a request.
One workaround is to move the s3vbe directory to your c: drive and
then add these two lines to your autoexec.bat file:

c:\s3vbe\s3vbe20/install
c:\s3vbe\s3vbe20 CLEAR-

the s3vbe20 program is *freeware* and it will give your S3 based video
card a linear frame buffer in addition to allowing you to use the
"CLEAR-" command to avoid the problem described above.


If there are still problems, running under DOS will almost always
clear them up.
