I I JUST INSTALL THE GAME, I OPEN THE WINRARR( IDK THE NAME OS THIS THING) AND I CLICK SOMETHING " VotV.exe"
BUT LIE 1 MINUTO LATER ITS SAY I NEED SOMETHING FOR SHADERS
WHAT IS A SHADER?
ITS LIKE A NAME FOR A FRIEND OF SONIC
WHAT I DO???????????
Gather unknown signals from deep, silent space · By
There is an itch.io app that you can use to be able to download and update games automatically: https://itch.io/app
On the off chance this isn't a meme:
Voices of the Void is delivered in a Data Format which you cannot run on it's own. Imagine a piece of IKEA furniture. You cannot use it while it is still in the box, it needs to be taken out and put together. This format is known as "Archive", all "Archive" files end in the letters .zip, .7zip or .rar (or similar).
To install Voices of the Void, you need to use a program like WinRar to "unpack" this Archive. If you download VotV, it will show up in your "Downloads" folder. To correctly install VotV, you need to first move the file to a place where you can find it, and where your system will allow it. This could be your "Desktop" folder. So, right-click "VotV.7zip", select "Cut" (or the euqivalent in your language), then move your view to the Desktop, right click an empty space, and click "Paste" (or whatever that is in Spanish? is that your language?).
So, now you should have VotV.7zip in a place where you can safely unpack it. I'm not familiar with WinRar (i use 7zip), but the process should be super simple, again, you right-click VotV.7zip and there should be an option like "unpack". Select that option, and if there is an option to "output to new folder" or "create folder", you'll want to select that.
Once this process is finished, you should be able to run VotV like any other .exe file, by finding said .exe file in whatever folder the unpacking created.
If you cannot figure this out yet, don't worry. I assume you are quite young. I can only recommend that you should be more careful when browsing the internet, as some technical knowledge is needed to remain safe on sites like itch.io, which can host malicious files or encourage unsafe computer use.