Does that not lead you to believe that perhaps ATARI added in some anti-cheat protection to create these issues? Does our trainer also affect the X360 and PS3 versions of the game, because people complain of the EXACT SAME PROBLEMS on those systems. Of course, I'm sure that's the trainer's fault too.
I guess we should just retire the game since it's obvious that people don't appreciate the work being put in to keep up with all these patches and the trainer is useless anyways.
It's most certainly an anti-cheat system and to be honest, I don't think you'll find away around it unless you dedicated a lot of time to it which may not be worth doing.
As long as people have access to the original version of the game they can simply uninstall the current version, reinstall the original v.55 version and block the TestDrive2 and UpLauncher executables from accessing the internet.
Then they can use the original v.55 trainer without any anti-cheat issues. Save games also work between versions, so they can later allow the game to update once the trainer is no longer needed and carry on as normal.
Because of that, it's probably not worth trying to bypass the anti-cheat stuff all the while that it's likely Atari will keep patching the game.
Either way, I'm glad you made the original trainer. It makes the game playable.
[Edited by IkaMusume, 2/25/2011 5:41:22 AM]