To save you the trouble, I will list the package files I NOW have, the ones I copied over from the traditional install. Fonts were NOT changing with the steam package files installed. package files are in place, the fonts were changed. I also noticed that, now that the correct. I removed that, and things appear to be working correctly upon cursory inspection. I noticed in particular that the Steam download adds a new EP1_Locale02.package that the traditional install didn't add. package files that are supposed to be in the Data and EP1_Data folders to verify I have the correct files, that would be fantastic. I would be very interested in getting the mod working with the Steam version, since I do have all of the correct original files, if that's something you'd be interested in as well. I am going to playtest it for awhile to make sure I didn't lose anything (I may have copied some things over into the wrong folder?). package files from the friend's installed copies. I then backed up the ones that Steam had installed with the "complete edition", then copied over the. So what I ended up doing was borrowing a copy of Spore and the GA expansion from a friend, installing and patching them in the proper order to get all the correct. No matter what, it won't save custom parts, even with the Forcesave.package installed. I included the sizes in case somebody can spot an anomaly in my install. Additionally, listed below are the package files I have that have been distributed with the digital download:ĭataep1/Spore_EP1_Content_01.package - 465.387 mbĭataep1/Spore_EP1_Content_02.package - 739.787 mbĭataep1/Spore_EP1_Data.package - 698.843 mbĭataep1/Spore_EP1_Locale_01.package - 3.706 mbĭataep1/Spore_EP1_Locale_02.package. I do not know what version Steam automatically updates to, but Creepy and Cute AND Galactic Adventures are both installed. For the record, I've tried both with and without the Dr. Pepper bot parts mod installed (although this seems to overlap with what Dark Injections supplies). My results seem to show they -have- to be in DataEP1 to work.Īs it stands, I have no other mods besides the 2012_DarkInjections_v.7.0.1.package, Arenas_RDX9.package, and ForceSave.package as far as mods go. I've slapped them into the plain Data folder, I've slapped them into DataEP1, I've distributed them separately between both, I've had copies of both in both. I've experimented with every possible distribution of files I can think of. I have a Steam install of the Spore Complete Pack - this means that all of the mods are installed into a single folder, which looks like so: I'm starting to think it's impossible with the Steam version, or something, but since I've found no keyword results with "steam" other than Davo asking if somebody's install was a Steam copy, I figured I'd ask. So I've spent the last two hours googling, searching forums, etc trying to figure out how to do this. Pepper parts on Steam., but NO other mods installed. It's still served at Rosa Mexicano restaurants, as well as many other, mainly Mexican, eateries.TL DR - Force Save isn't working, and no matter how I do it I cannot save any of the custom parts from the Dark Injections Mod. She served a huitlacoche-focused dinner at the James Beard House in 1989 that went over so well, others started thinking about the food. The semi-popularity of the ingredient came about thanks to Josefina Howard, founder and the first chef-owner of Rosa Mexicano in New York. Luckily, with the influx of culinary awareness, huitlacoche has become a bit of a delicacy in the United States. Many farmers outside of Mexico destroy infected plants, and new strains of corn have been modified that prove resilient to the fungus. Of course, not everyone is okay with plant-ruining diseases creeping in on their crops. As far as nutrition is concerned, huitlacoche offers more protein than regular corn and has high amounts of lysine, an essential amino acid not found in normal kernels. The former called the fungus "nanha," and the latter held the ingredient in such high standing they say it symbolized the "generation of life." In fact, huitlacoche has been an important food for indigenous peoples of the Southwest for centuries, with the fungus being used for ceremonial, culinary, and medicinal purposes. The Native American Hopi and Zuni tribes have also worked with huitlacoche from the get-go.
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