
When a 32-bit application is large address aware, it can access up to 4 GiB on 圆4 operating systems and all memory that isn't used by the operating system and other applications on x86. Now my initial reaction was " bull****, they're making this info up." But hope and curiosity is getting the better of me. This is an application that assists in making applications large address aware. If you have 8GB of ram -> iMaxAllocatedMemoryBytes=4000000000 If you have 6GB of ram -> iMaxAllocatedMemoryBytes=3000000000 If you have 4GB of ram -> iMaxAllocatedMemoryBytes=2000000000 He later mentions some bits of code but I couldnt tell definitively how wine handles this and didnt want. On 64-bit Windows and Linux, the whole 4GB of address space will be visible to applications with such a flag'. Navigate through your hard-drive until you find the EXE you want to patch.

A pop-up window will open, asking you to select a single executable file.
#Laa 4gb mem patch Patch#
Then change the value marked as “*******” with the approximate amount of your system memory, by consulting the tab below: In Link 1, mikolajz says that 'AFAIR, the 3GB address space is the default on Linux and may be even increased by distributions. To use the tool, do the following: Download the latest version of 4GB Patch from the NT Core website, which is also the author’s official page.

Open your Skyrim.ini, usually located at the path: C:\Users\youruser\Documents\My Games\Skyrim and search for the line under the section: But this doesn’t necessarily mean your system will automatically use more than 4gb of RAM! In order to tell to Skyrim your correct amount of system memory you have to apply the following tweak:
#Laa 4gb mem patch 64 Bit#
Bethesda released the “4gb patch” more than 8 months ago, but this doesn’t really matter, it was just a LAA fix in order to allow the properly handling of memory under 64 bit systems.
