The default games were Hearts, Solitaire, Spider Solitaire, Freecell, Minesweeper, and Pinball if you had windows 98 plus!
The default games were Hearts, Solitaire, Spider Solitaire, Freecell, Minesweeper, and Pinball if you had windows 98 plus!
Most games written for Windows 3.1 or Windows 95 will run on Windows 98. Games that were only written with Windows 2000 or later in mind will usually not run on Windows 98.
Do you mean the games say "compatible with windows 98?" and you have Windows XP? Games are backwards compatible. Meaning, if the games say "windows 98", windows 95 is ok (anything before windows 98 will work). But it is not forward compatible--Windows 2000, windows xp, etc. will not work. does this answer?
Not by default. There is software available to read them, however.
Many applications and games written for or compatible with Windows 98 will run on Windows Vista.
As long as the drive is capable of reading DVDs, and the file system is one that Windows 98 understands (must be ISO9660 or UDF 1.02), Windows 98 should be able to read the disc. Note that Windows 98 cannot read UDF 1.50 or later discs, which Windows Vista and some DVD authoring programs default to.
From a Windows 98 CD. Incidentally, a retail copy of Windows 98 only came with a few games, like Solitaire, MineSweeper, and Canfield. Other games may have been bundled on a manufacturer's copy, but you would need their CD to copy them off of.
There are thousands of games that run on Windows 98. With the proper codecs installed, virtually any type of media file can be played on Windows 98, as long as the computer is technically powerful enough for it.
You can try to run it in the compatibility mode. But 99% of games for Windows 98 will not work under Vista.
No. Windows 98 and later include the ability to use multiple displays by default.
Windows 98 home publishing is for Windows 98. Windows 98 programs don't work well on Windows XP sometimes.
There are no unique features of Windows 98, nothing is unique about Windows 98.