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Boss load order for fallout 4
Boss load order for fallout 4











boss load order for fallout 4
  1. #BOSS LOAD ORDER FOR FALLOUT 4 INSTALL#
  2. #BOSS LOAD ORDER FOR FALLOUT 4 MODS#
  3. #BOSS LOAD ORDER FOR FALLOUT 4 PC#

The base engine is the same as the one used in Fallout 4, but not even Fallout 4 has loading this well optimized. For some reason Bethesda really optimized load times with Special Edition. Now the max amount doesn't seem to have a limit.įaster load times. Additional enemies over 50 nearby would literally stand in one spot doing nothing because the game engine AI controller couldn't handle that many at once. Previous engine could only handle 50 enemies in combat for example. The engine can handle more things thrown at it including far more npc interactions. The base client is much more stable over all too. But this is a big deal for consoles as they had no access to ENB like lighting effects and now they have this at least. I certainly do because I don't like the default.

#BOSS LOAD ORDER FOR FALLOUT 4 PC#

Still on PC this isn't a big deal because you will probably use a different ENB. Special edition basically rolls in an ENB by default as a soft ENB.

#BOSS LOAD ORDER FOR FALLOUT 4 INSTALL#

Previously if you liked nice lighting and weather effects as well as a "clearer" look to the game you needed to install an ENB.

#BOSS LOAD ORDER FOR FALLOUT 4 MODS#

The game itself with no mods could take up to 2.5 GB of memory while running.īetter lighting without ENB. The game could only run in a 4GB memory space previously, and really anything over 3 GB started to get unstable. Old skyrim would start having problems if you were using a lot of mods, more so of those massive resolution texture mods. And if you bought skyrim, not sure why you didn't buy special edition as it costs the same on PC as legendary edition.Ħ4 bit client = way more addressable memory. Play Special Edition only since it was free in the first place for PC users if you already owned it previously on PC. If you are playing Skyrim on PC and playing Oldrim. So when there's overlap, you generally put the "big" mods earlier and the smaller more specific ones later. ^ The general rule of thumb is "big mods" like ELFX will override a ton of variables and need to go earlier than smaller ones like "Remove Interior Fog" that change only some of the same variables. Wearable Lantern / Lanterns of Skyrim (these two always worked better when placed last for some reason) Anything else that may be overidden by lighting / weather mods if placed before (eg, Remove Interior Fog, Disable Eye Adaptation or Rainbows)Ĩ. ELFX + PureWeather (If using ELFX enhancer, this goes after main ELFX file)ħ. Most other general gameplay tweaks (eg, I have increased carry weight, A Matter of Time, added quest map markers, faster arrows, guard dialogue, etc)Ħ. High Res Texture packs (many specific texture mods just get put into the meshes & textures folder as overrides without being loaded as an. 4x Unofficial patches (Skyrim + DawnGuard, Dragonborn & Hearthfires)ģ.

boss load order for fallout 4

Expansions (DawnGuard, Dragonborn & Hearthfires)Ģ. The order that works for me though is:-ġ. Chased by a tree? There are so many mods and combinations of mods I'm not sure there is a single "definitive" guide.













Boss load order for fallout 4