Thanks for the reply, but ive been using windows 10 since its beta and this is the first time this happen so its weird? and windows 10 use Edge , internet explorer isnt on 10 its an upgraded version of it and like i said never had this issue before so i would think it is not related to windows 10 otherwise it would happened a year ago
Update: Weirdly it work now all of sudden so maybe it was mabinogi itself that they fixed i guess?
A few things. I've had the exact same issue. Now I didn't mention this because at the time that I'd had it was quite awhile ago (almost 2 years). I've since done many changes and a complete wipe/rebuild/resetup of my machine.
So, regarding this issue: I'm not aware as to the exact cause, but have some theories that relate to IE 11 and Mabinogi being designed for that and prior.
Internet Explorer 11 IS tucked away at C:\Program Files\Internet Explorer unless, you've a version per here:
https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/insider/wiki/insider_internet-insider_ie/how-to-locate-and-open-internet-explorer-in/4b067f8b-a0dc-4fba-9e63-00fb14ea82e8?auth=1 (which may be outdated or this may've changed) I'm going to presume that you were aware of this since you've been using it since Beta. If not, hopefully this helps. Otherwise, disregard.
Theories based in fact: The Mabinogi redirector initiated upon exit is designed for prior than Edge. Try compatibility mode too perhaps? Mine opens IE 11 for backwards compatibility, and as a result has less issues. Even now Edge still doesn't have much plugin support for security concerns/reasons and isn't as widely supported as some parties would prefer.
You can dig further if you wish, and you can also enable by:
Right-click the Start button, choose Control Panel from the pop-up menu, and click the Control Panel’s Programs icon.
From the Programs and Features category, choose Turn Windows Features On or Off.
Put a checkmark in the box next to Internet Explorer 11, and click the OK button.
Some things to think about:
Just because something happens the first time for you doesn't mean that this problem hasn't happened for others many times before. So for "you", yes, I totally understand this would seem weird. This is your experience though, and your PC. We don't know all of that which you put on it or how you maintain it, but the number one thing that you want to avoid with computers in general is: avoid making assumptions. This in of itself, bites us in the butt every time. I'd say trust me I know from experience and ask that you believe me, but you really don't know me or for that matter that I've been doing this a long time (too long to really recall). There's even still things that catch me now and then. So, I've learned to never assume anything. lol. There's also nothing wrong with being Joe Six Pack and having someone else do your PC work for you. However, you really should compensate them for their time.
Final note:
Originally, I wasn't going to respond to this, I was just going to leave it be. However, perhaps against my better judgement... I felt it'd be remiss to allow inaccurate information/assumptions to propagate this thread. This in of itself is of no use to anyone then as a collective knowledge base designed to help others. The real question about your final thought, is did you reboot or refresh your TCP/IP Stack / flushdns in some way? Rather, some way that forcefully causes the browsers and NIC to flush the caches and buffer so to speak?