Cómo solucionar el error “No se pudo asignar memoria de video” en Indiana Jones y el Gran Círculo

El error “No se pudo asignar memoria de video” en Indiana Jones and the Great Circle es justo lo que indica: el juego no puede obtener suficiente VRAM de la GPU para una experiencia de juego fluida. Normalmente, esto aparece si la GPU tiene una VRAM bastante limitada (menos de 8 GB), especialmente porque el trazado de rayos es un requisito mínimo, lo que aumenta considerablemente la demanda de VRAM. Pero aquí está lo extraño: algunas personas con un hardware decente siguen recibiendo este error, lo que me hace pensar que suele estar relacionado con errores de controladores o configuraciones incorrectas, en lugar de limitaciones reales del hardware. En cualquier caso, solucionarlo podría implicar ajustar algunas configuraciones o controladores, así que aquí hay algunos métodos que han funcionado para otros.

Cómo solucionar el error “Error al asignar memoria de video” en Indiana Jones y el Gran Círculo

Ejecutar el juego en modo de alto rendimiento hace que Windows use la GPU dedicada en lugar de la tarjeta gráfica integrada, lo que a veces puede ayudar a liberar VRAM y evitar este error, especialmente cuando el juego suele usar la GPU incorrecta por defecto. Vale la pena intentarlo si aún no estás forzando la aplicación a usar la tarjeta gráfica dedicada.

  1. Presione Buscar en Windows (presione Win+ S) y escriba Configuración de gráficos.
  2. Haga clic en Configuración de gráficos.
  3. Desplácese hacia abajo o busque Indiana Jones and the Great Circle, luego haga clic en Explorar.
  4. Navega hasta donde instalaste el juego. El ejecutable podría estar en algún lugar comoC:\Program Files\IndianaJones\> or similar — find the.exe.
  5. Add the game, then select it in the list, hit Options, and choose High Performance.
  6. Hit Save and restart the game to see if that clears the memory error.

Rolling back the GPU driver is often a quick fix, especially if the current driver update introduced bugs. Sometimes newest drivers don’t play nice with specific games or engine features. So if the problem just started happening after a driver update, rolling back might restore stability.

  1. Right-click the Start menu, pick Device Manager.
  2. Expand Display Adapters and right-click your GPU, select Properties.
  3. Head over to the Driver tab and see if Roll Back Driver is clickable. If so, give it a shot.
  4. If it’s greyed out, no worries — you can manually find an older driver. Pop over to your GPU manufacturer’s website (NVIDIA, AMD, Intel), find your model, and download an older version from their driver archive.
  5. Install that, then reboot and run the game to check if it helps.

Lower the graphics settings — kinda like turning down the graphics in a game from ultra to low. Since the error is all about VRAM, cutting back on textures, effects, or resolution can reduce the load on your GPU and bypass the error.

  1. Launch Indiana Jones and go into Settings.
  2. Navigate to the Video or Graphics section.
  3. Set all quality options to Low — things like texture quality, shadows, ray tracing, all that.
  4. Try running the game again. Sometimes, even just making sure VRAM demand is lowered enough can fix these hiccups.

If the above didn’t help, reinstalling your GPU driver might. Sometimes drivers get corrupted or don’t install right, which could cause weird issues like this. Reinstalling can clean things up and ensure you’re on a stable version.

  1. Hit Win + R and type devmgmt.msc, then hit Enter.
  2. In Device Manager, expand Display Adapters, right-click your GPU, and choose Uninstall device.
  3. Confirm the uninstall. Afterward, head over to your GPU manufacturer’s site — NVIDIA’s driver download, AMD’s support pages.— and download the latest driver.
  4. Run the installer and reboot. Launch the game again after installing.

Verifying game files can catch corrupted or missing files that might cause memory issues. Particularly if system requirements are met but errors persist, checking integrity can fix hidden problems.

  1. If you’re on Steam, open your Library.
  2. Right-click Indiana Jones, go to Properties.
  3. Select Local Files and click Verify integrity of game files.
  4. This process might take a few minutes. After it’s done, relaunch and see if the error’s gone.

And of course, if nothing else works, a full reinstall of the game is the last resort — sometimes, just wiping and starting fresh can clear stubborn issues.

Because of course, Windows has to make it harder than necessary.