Morrowind overhaul crash on new game
MORROWIND OVERHAUL CRASH ON NEW GAME MOD
I had spent most of my time using the old Nexus Mod Manager, which is now Vortex (and I hate it). I started my journey on the intermediate side of a newb. It was only a couple of bucks for the month. I can't imagine how much longer it would take with the free membership, which is why I decided the premium subscription was worth it for me. It's something I recommend because even with that, a lot of the total time is devoted to understanding the files you need. Seriously, kudos.įor me, it was worth purchasing a month's worth of Nexus Premium, which allows multiple, uncapped downloads for getting the mods. Though the amount of work the user has to put in is quite substantial, it pales in comparison to the work required to maintain the guide and patches. The processĪll credit for how my installation of Skyrim looks and runs goes to DarkLadyLexy and their team. You can see the results in the images contained within this post. It took a couple of tries and almost 24 hours of work, but I managed to get everything up and running. The pre-requisites list alone was enough to put off a sane human being, let alone how many mods to install, configurations to run, merges to do, and so on. It wasn't until weeks ago that I decided to take a stab at Lexy's Legacy of the Dragonborn, an extensive guide to have a beautiful and stable ultra-modded Skyrim. It was overwhelming, and it pushed me away for a few months. There were people with mind-bogglingly huge modlists and load orders, and I discovered tools I'd never heard of before, like SSEEdit and DynDOLOD. Before, I thought 200-400 mods were "ultra," but it wasn't until I dove into the enthusiast community that I found out how wrong I was.
Now here I sit with a 2080 Ti, and I wanted to take a stab at real ultra-modding Skyrim. Though my framerate never exceded 60fps, I loved almost every minute.
MORROWIND OVERHAUL CRASH ON NEW GAME INSTALL
It wasn't until I upgraded to a 1080 Ti that I felt the urge to go back to Skyrim and install a bunch of GPU-crippling mods. I've long dabbled in modding Bethesda games, but I usually just installed some graphical mods, gameplay adjustments, and the required bugfixes and patches.
Throw in Dawnguard and Dragonborn, and I was a content gamer for years.īefore, I thought 200-400 mods were "ultra." Oh, how wrong I was. In the months and years to follow, I poured hundreds of hours into the Xbox 360 and PC versions as I did with Daggerfall, Morrowind, and Oblivion. Despite being the person in charge of controlling the music, and therefore necessary, I decided to skip sleeping to play Skyrim.
See, I had a wedding to go to that same day for my now sister-in-law and her husband. VPN Deals: Lifetime license for $16, monthly plans at $1 & more