Guest Posted December 25, 2015 Posted December 25, 2015 so yesterday i decided i want to be mature and go from big cbbe tits to my real life favorite perky unp tits. so i unistalled all my cbbe stuff and installed a whole lot of unp then i fiddld around in steam to get a john cena sound mod but i dont know exactly how to use steam mods so i messed around their and unsubscribed from all (it was just an armor mod and the john cena sound one) I had my stuff all set for some unp skyrim adventure but I noticed on the load screen the textures on the model of the dragon were soft as hell game begins and its all soft low res textures and exposed seamlines on nude bodies (female and male) i checked if i had the high res texture pack's esp off and no it is in fact active and my very 1st set of esp's after the esm's how do i get my regular high res textures back? it just looks bad at the moment its softer than titties all over i look and there are seamlines :^(
Gameplayer Posted December 25, 2015 Posted December 25, 2015 Since your modding directly to the folder Skyrim\Data There are a lot of things that could still be present in your Textures, Meshes, and various installation paths that may all be waiting to surprise you down the line. STEAM subscriptions are the worst of the lot. Doesnt even offer a real mod manager. It just installs directly to the data folder and really how should I know if it really removes the mod? I know it likely can remove not only the mod but also if some other mod also had placed a file there in the data path and needed that file well guess what Steam isn't going to respect that....Meaning you lose a file that some other mod could call on....Is that likely "YES" does it happen often? In fact it happens a hell of a lot more than most people realize. Its called "Overwrite" and when you remove a file that has been overwriten well you could be left with ESP's that expect that file to be there but its not, that can lead to crashes at its worst. Nexus Mod Manager, not the best but way better than going without a manager. Can suffer some issues like I just described but I hear it's gotten more robust features since I stopped using it for serious modding. Mod Organizer is what I use because it doesn't place files into the game folders at all. It uses a Virtual Data Folder system, tells you exactly what files are "Overwritten" -The real trick here is that no files are actually permanently overwritten -->The file is safe its simply not the file that will be used by the game. Anyway, either your Skyrim\Data isn't clean from when you started modding up your next game or you have installed a bunch of mods and now your stuck with no real idea of what is making this issue and no real tools to test to see what it could be But with Mod Organizer I could narrow that down very quickly, remove it easily, and be back in game playing again already.
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