The progress bar sat frozen at 99.9%. It had been there for twenty minutes.
Alex stared at the monitor, the blue light reflecting in his tired eyes. The file name on his desktop was a chaotic jumble of code and ego: Call.of.Duty.Advanced.Warfare.Repack.By.Corepack.Top.exe.
It was 2015. The internet was slow, and patience was a currency Alex was running out of.
"Just finish," he whispered, clutching his lukewarm mug of coffee. He had skipped the steam version, skipping the hefty 50GB download for this "miracle" repack promising the same experience in a fraction of the size. Corepack had a reputation—risky, sometimes buggy, but efficient.
Suddenly, the command prompt flickered. Text scrolled rapidly down the black screen: Unpacking assets... Decompressing textures... Patching executable...
His hard drive whirred, a grinding sound that always made him nervous. It sounded like a jet engine taking off. The estimated size was ballooning, the compressed 15GB repack exploding into the full, monstrous game on his drive.
Error: Archive corrupted? The text flashed. callofdutyadvancedwarfarerepackbycorepack top
Alex’s heart stopped. He leaned forward, ready to scream at the screen.
Retry... Success.
The progress bar jumped. Installation Complete.
He exhaled a breath he didn’t know he was holding. He navigated to the folder, scanning past the 'readme' files and the crack instructions he had already memorized. He clicked the icon.
The screen went black, then lit up with the familiar, booming orange logo of Call of Duty. Then came the high-octane guitar riffs of the menu music. It worked. The Kevin Spacey-rendered face looked out from the main menu, crisp and detailed, defying the low bandwidth that had brought him here.
Alex grabbed his controller. The "Corepack" watermark was gone from his mind now, replaced by the adrenaline of the virtual battlefield. It wasn't the pristine, official Steam version, but it was his victory—a digital trophy won against the tyranny of slow internet and massive file sizes. The progress bar sat frozen at 99
"Let's do this," he said, clicking New Game.
Important Disclaimer:
CorePack is a disbanded group. This guide is for archival and educational purposes only. Downloading copyrighted games without owning a legitimate license may violate laws in your region. Proceed at your own risk.
| Feature | CorePack | FitGirl | Xatab | |---------|----------|---------|-------| | Compressed size | 15–22 GB | 14–19 GB | 18–24 GB | | Install time | Medium | Long (slower CPU) | Fast | | Selective download | Yes (languages/videos) | Yes | No | | Crack included | Yes (CODEX base) | Yes | Yes | | Support status | Disbanded | Active | Active |
.rar, .7z, or .zip parts. Do not run the installer from inside the zipped folder.setup.exe with Malwarebytes / Windows Defender.Advanced Warfare.exe)..bat or .reg files from unknown sources.Use QuickSFV or MD5 Checker to ensure no corrupted downloads.
Extract the archive – Use WinRAR or 7-Zip to unpack the .rar or .7z file. Do not run from inside the archive.
Run Setup.exe as Administrator – Right-click and select "Run as administrator." Step 2: Extract the Archives
Select installation directory – Avoid C:\Program Files (permission issues). Use C:\Games\Advanced Warfare or a secondary drive.
Choose components – Uncheck “High-res textures” if you have less than 4GB VRAM. Keep “Multiplayer Bots” checked if you want offline matches.
Start installation – This will take 20-45 minutes depending on your CPU (CorePack uses high compression, so older i3/i5 CPUs will take longer).
Apply crack – After installer finishes, a window pops up asking “Copy crack files?”. Click YES. If missed, manually copy the CODEX or CorePack folder contents into the game root.
Run the game – Launch s1_sp64_ship.exe for campaign, s1_mp64_ship.exe for multiplayer/zombies.