File archive missing label

Hi,

I have been unable to play Sins of a Solar Empire: Rebellion over the past few weeks due to the following problem.

This appears when the game boots up:

Text FileArchive missing Label.

File: C:\Users\Matteo\Documents\My Games\Ironclad Games\Sins of a Solar Empire Rebellion\Setting\rebellion.uimappings.setting
Label: EnableZOffset
Line Number:166
Line Contents:TakeHighResScreenShot

Could you kindly advise me, please?

EDIT: The Developer mode works perfectly fine. No mods are present in it.

My computer specifications:

AMD A10 7700K
8 GB RAM
GTX 750ti
Seagate 2TB SSHD

Windows 7 64 bit

 

20,408 views 4 replies
Reply #1 Top

Was that file modified by hand? Either way, rename the file noted above and restart Sins. It will create a fresh version of the file but your key mappings (if you made any) will be wiped. You can recover them by doing a diff between the new fresh file and the renamed file (use Beyond Compare or something similar). If that is too much of a pain, simply redo them in the in-game interface.

Reply #2 Top

Was that file modified by hand? Either way, rename the file noted above and restart Sins. It will create a fresh version of the file but your key mappings (if you made any) will be wiped. You can recover them by doing a diff between the new fresh file and the renamed file (use Beyond Compare or something similar). If that is too much of a pain, simply redo them in the in-game interface.

Found the file. What do I have to rename it to?

Reply #3 Top

Quoting mandystella, reply 2


Was that file modified by hand? Either way, rename the file noted above and restart Sins. It will create a fresh version of the file but your key mappings (if you made any) will be wiped. You can recover them by doing a diff between the new fresh file and the renamed file (use Beyond Compare or something similar). If that is too much of a pain, simply redo them in the in-game interface.


Found the file. What do I have to rename it to?

rename it to anything else and the game will recreate the file on startup.