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I want to do this (see video) quite badly, but the problem is I have a Mac and not a windows. So I get lost after system32 and what not. Please help! :c

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UucAscSUEvs

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    In the future, please describe your problem with words, if possible. A video is fine as supplementary information, but not like this. – Daniel B Jul 01 '14 at 05:56
  • Duplicate: http://superuser.com/questions/346518/how-do-i-refresh-the-hosts-file-on-os-x/346519#346519 – slhck Jul 01 '14 at 06:09

2 Answers2

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On a Mac the hosts file can be found at /etc/hosts, and the SteamApps files are in /Users/username/Library/Application Support/Steam/SteamApps (replace username with your Mac username).

You may need administrator privileges to edit the files. If so, open Terminal and type, for example, sudo nano "/etc/hosts".

Of course, as the video is demonstrating a bug on Windows, that big won't necessarily exist on a Mac - let us know if it still works!

tenorkev
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The hosts file is located at /etc/hosts on regular UNIX and Linux systems.

Daniel B
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