


(It was probably especially complicated for me, because I had multiple versions of Visual Studio installed simultaneously.)
Now that I see what actually works, I’m not surprised I failed to make it work in previous attempts. Now I should tell you that these instructions were not exactly straightforward. So I’ve just been staying with Visual Studio 2010 for XNA development (while using 2012 and now 2013 for other development).īut these directions actually worked, and I was able to get XNA running in Visual Studio 20! I had one time where I spent about 10 hours total mucking around with configuration files and never had anything happen, and another time where I got the XNA extension loaded, but the content project just didn’t work at all. I should mention that in the past, I’ve followed directions like this without success. A few weeks ago, I got a couple of emails from two different people, both of them pointing me in the direction of some steps that would get XNA installed in Visual Studio 2012 or 2013.
