ibanezrg82: The real fun part of this was in reverting back to the original, all of my game settings got reset to default including mods and I had to reinstall all of those, complete cluster eff
I took some steps and now have to make sure my games do not auto update and added a command line to the shortcut not to update, as well as deleted some of the update files.
Yeah. That happens, when you import already installed games. Galaxy validates and "repairs" them for you. The only way to prevent having to reinstall them, is to create a copy of the folder, have Galaxy "repair" the install, then delete the contents of the folder and paste the stuff from the copy back into it. Super annoying, but if modding a game is particularly difficult and time consuming, preferable.
Phoenix-co: Instead of just deleting the updater, just create a new .txt file somewhere [ . . . ]
"Instead of deleting, just do"? Implying it's less work to do all of that stuff...?
That's entirely unnecessary. "Just deleting" is the easiest, quickest, and least error-prone way to go about this.
And since the version won't magically update itself (that's what the updater was for), it won't be able to gain the ability to update itself, since... you know, it can't update itself as is.
But if it doesn't throw any errors, you do you.
But also, very crucial detail to mention: unhide / display file extentions, so you don't end up with a "GalaxyUpdater.exe.txt" file...
BTW, I did that for Skype back in the day, too. Because that was the only solution to control Skype...