- #BATHING BEAUTIES OR BEEFCAKE LUXURY SUITE CTD INSTALL#
- #BATHING BEAUTIES OR BEEFCAKE LUXURY SUITE CTD MOD#
- #BATHING BEAUTIES OR BEEFCAKE LUXURY SUITE CTD MODS#
#BATHING BEAUTIES OR BEEFCAKE LUXURY SUITE CTD MODS#
I also used mods to pretty the characters up. There’s a later version available on Nexus that fixes the mannequins and storage so you don’t lose anything. I really liked it, but don’t get the one through Steam. It is a Dragonborn castle, located near that big pinnacle in the center of the map. I ended up at about 96 mods, and things were stable. I fiddled around for a week until I finally just re-installed everything, being selective this time.
#BATHING BEAUTIES OR BEEFCAKE LUXURY SUITE CTD INSTALL#
Turns out it’s not a good idea to install or uninstall mods in the middle of a game, and there’s a limit to how many mods the game can handle. I had about 160 going when things got really buggy.
#BATHING BEAUTIES OR BEEFCAKE LUXURY SUITE CTD MOD#
I downloaded their Vortex mod manager, and pulled from the much greater variety of mods available on their site. This time I eschewed the mods available through Steam. Besides, I’d finished the main quest and all the DLC’s, so I just went and played something else instead.Īnyway, after a few months I was ready to try Skyrim again. I could’ve waited a month or so and most of the modders would’ve updated their work, but there were no guarantees, I was in a rage and I just uninstalled the thing. And there you go – my modded game was broken. I sided with the Empire (which honestly seems like the only morally correct choice to me), and was the BDOC. I played through the main quest and all the DLC as a big Norse Dragonborn. No stats? And where are all those cool professions like Agents, Battlemages, Nightblades and Spellswords? Third, the controls are whack! My mouse cursor floats all over the place, everything rocks back and forth, I can’t select a damned dialogue option accurately, and the tunnel-vision of first-person means I get flanked constantly. Secondly, the character builds and progress are even more dumbed-down than Oblivion, WTF guys! OK, I hear they did that to make the game appeal to a wider, console-based audience, and they certainly achieved their goal. I installed a lot of mods and had a lot of fun.īut damn me if they didn’t make the characters ugly here in Skyrim too! What in hell are those guys thinking? Ugly ugly ugly! Crying out loud, gang, cut it out. Those updates can wreck your saved games (see below), undoing months of gaming and killing your character with the stroke of a virtual pen.Īnyway I installed Skyrim, and discovered the ability to mod it via the Steam menu. And secondly, they keep pushing updates through, something I wouldn’t have to worry about if I owned the game on a CD. First off, you don’t have anything stocked away that you can replay years later, you’re dependent on Steam still being around. You have to get it through Steam, which I’m not entirely comfortable with. I got the Special Edition, which is the latest incarnation. Enough with the Oblivion gates already, I need a main quest that I can ignore! But I don’t feel motivated to play it again. Oh, I played the DLC and thought Sheogorath was a lot of fun. Well anyway, I played it for a little while, got frustrated and quit, came back to it, got a little tired of all the Oblivion gates, then finally just powered through the main quest. And the people looked like potato-heads, again with the crappy art! I mean, there’s something to be said for having a style, but really guys. As has been said elsewhere, the rules were dumbed down compared to Morrowind. And then I replaced it and got to play Fallout 3 and Fallout: New Vegas!Īnd I finally got to play Oblivion. I’d been a devout fan of Fallout as well as the Elder Scrolls, but I couldn’t progress past Fallout 2 or Morrowind until that computer died. If I had to pick an engine for eternal adventures in Tamriel, this is the one I’d pick.īut why did they have to make the characters so damned ugly?Īfter that I didn’t do much high-powered video-gaming because my computer fell behind the tech curve. It was great that you could just ignore it and do what you wanted to. I played this through many times as well, only doing the main quest the first time. While I hated the constant attacks by cliff racers, I liked the character builds and options and growth very much. I wasn’t really even interested in the Dunmer, and I’d have preferred the ability to sandbox all over Tamriel again. I thought those elves had been hit way too often with the ugly stick. Now when Morrowind came out, well I’ll be frank. I’m a role-player though, and those were action games, so I got frustrated and never finished playing those. Then along came Battlespire and Redguard. I was a bit frustrated with the older interface and gameplay, but I played through the main quest (with the help of a walk-through when I got stuck). I started with Daggerfall, and played it many, many times.