Did you go to direct connect, then enter Localhost? Or another thing you could try is entering your router's local IP address. Common ones are- 192.168.0.9 and 192.168.0.1
To find yours, you can type cmd in the Windows search bar and you will be greeted with a command prompt. In the prompt, type ipconfig, and look at the ipv4 address. That is your LAN IP. Hope this helped!
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PC specs: Intel Core 2 Duo e8500 @ 3.16ghz / XFX Radeon HD 6670 2GB DDR3 / 6GB 1666MHz DDR3 RAM / Windows 7 Professional
Did you go to direct connect, then enter Localhost? Or another thing you could try is entering your router's local IP address. Common ones are- 192.168.0.9 and 192.168.0.1
To find yours, you can type cmd in the Windows search bar and you will be greeted with a command prompt. In the prompt, type ipconfig, and look at the ipv4 address. That is your LAN IP. Hope this helped!
Any help? Thanks.
Did you go to direct connect, then enter Localhost? Or another thing you could try is entering your router's local IP address. Common ones are- 192.168.0.9 and 192.168.0.1
To find yours, you can type cmd in the Windows search bar and you will be greeted with a command prompt. In the prompt, type ipconfig, and look at the ipv4 address. That is your LAN IP. Hope this helped!
PC specs: Intel Core 2 Duo e8500 @ 3.16ghz / XFX Radeon HD 6670 2GB DDR3 / 6GB 1666MHz DDR3 RAM / Windows 7 Professional
That is what I've been doing and it won't work.
PC specs: Intel Core 2 Duo e8500 @ 3.16ghz / XFX Radeon HD 6670 2GB DDR3 / 6GB 1666MHz DDR3 RAM / Windows 7 Professional