Installing openBVE on Windows
In order to install openBVE on Windows, please follow the instructions below. It is assumed that you know how to download files from the internet and how to extract ZIP files. If not, please look up how to do these things somewhere else.
The first thing you should do is to create the install directory. This directory can be anywhere on your hard drive and can have any name you want, for example "openBVE". It is where you will deploy the files that you are about to download.
Download the
latest stable version
of the openBVE main program and extract the ZIP file to your install directory.
Download
this ZIP file
and extract it anywhere on your hard drive. It contains an installer that you should run and which will install OpenAL onto your computer.
Please download the .NET Framework 4 Client Profile from
here
unless you already have it.
By default, all of the options you can set up in openBVE and all the add-ons you download through openBVE are not stored in the install directory, but in a directory specific to your operating system. If you want this "userdata" inside your install directory, download
this ZIP file
and extract it to your install directory.
You can now start OpenBve.exe from your install directory and start playing.
If you have run into problems during the installation process, please see the
Troubleshooting
section for some commonly encounterd problems.
It is also highly recommended that you browse through the
Install and Play
pages. You can find valuable information there such as the keyboard assignment and a general overview on how to operate trains.
If you ever want to update openBVE to the latest available version, you only need to download the main program again and extract it to your install directory. You do not have to download the other stuff again.
There are also plenty of legacy add-ons, particularly for BVE Trainsim, that can also be used but must be found and installed manually. Some authors of such add-ons make it easy for you by providing a single archive that just needs to be extracted somewhere, while others make it very complicated. You have to read
the folder structure for legacy routes and trains
before even considering to install such add-ons.