It's probably in within your Documents. Try looking for something like Warcraft III PTR.
x86 is for 32bit OS (supported on 64bit OSes via compatibility mode) while x86-64 is for 64bit OS. Technically there are processors which do not support 64bit OS, but they are either stupidly old or so weak one should not be using them anyway. If you buy an I3, I5, I7 or I9 from Intel or a Ryzen/ThreadRipper from AMD both will support x86-64 and are designed around it.I guess x86 is for 32bit OS and x86_64 for x64 operating systems. I mean, the performance works better on each depending on your processor.
If I'm not mistaken. @Dr Super Good knows such details.
The maps folder in 1.30.4 is a dummy anyway. The maps are inside and used from the CASC archive and were only exposed for compatibility with the old editor. The new editor detects these maps inside the CASC archive, like StarCraft II, and as such the folder is no longer needed.Thanks, but once inside i have 3 sub directories: "Data", "x86" and "x86_64" none of them containing the "map" folder as on the older version. How this works?
Well, you can place maps which aren't Blizzard marked in there (I mean, external to the CASC) and run them. You don't have to put them through Users/Documents like the campaigns.The maps folder in 1.30.4 is a dummy anyway.
Well, you can place maps which aren't Blizzard marked in there (I mean, external to the CASC) and run them. You don't have to put them through Users/Documents like the campaigns.
User maps go in the appropriate folder in Documents. In this case Documents\Warcraft III Public Test\Maps.[/COLOR]
Likely an oversight.Well, you can place maps which aren't Blizzard marked in there (I mean, external to the CASC) and run them. You don't have to put them through Users/Documents like the campaigns.
What partition format is your C drive? Use Disk Management to check. It should be NTFS for Windows.can't find such "maps" directory, and i think i'mhaving installation related problems: