![]() ![]() I also fully understand what is being replaced, why it is replaced and what replacement I want to the extent that I could manually install 200+ mods and it will be stable. It is probably as I have used NMM since Skyrim and I know every flaw/glitch and shortcut. A little like asking which is the best car as every model has it's ups and downs. It's just in my experience, I have had problems and spent an hour finding it when it takes me 2 minutes on others and likewise it is purely my opinion. )ĭon't get me wrong, I have used Vortex a lot and if it sounds like a criticism then to you and everyone I apologise sincerely. Therefore I won't start pointing out my ignorance by faulting flaws in it that don't exist. I've no idea on the NMM's state of current development if I'm being perfectly honest. Its means of literally overwriting (next mod overwrites the files of the last mod installed) was one of its worst features. At that point in time it was an absolutely terrible implementation of mod management. I threw NMM to the curb many moons ago, pre-Vortex, when it was all but useless to any but those who couldn't let go of the familiarity. MO2 is completely virtualized, your vanilla remains completely vanilla. The rest are load overhead, no more or less.Īs far as profiles and instances go, if that's your ultimate goal, you should be using MO2 for Fallout 4, not NMM or Vortex at all. Only the last one (in the case provided) will do anything. NMM lets you screw up, without warning, and load all of those plugins. Live Dismemberment off the top of my head if you want to try one) or you say no and enable the plugins you do want separately. Up to you, in Vortex you either say yes and disable the plugins you don't want (i.e. ![]() It doesn't give you a pick or choose list, no, but neither does NMM, or MO. Vortex lets you know there are multiple plugins and will enable them all (or none) depending on whether you answer yes/no to the "has multiple plugins, enable them all" question. Just like NMM (and MO/MO2, fwiw), it lists mods and plugins separately. It actually sounds more like you're unfamiliar with Vortex than any actual real criticism in this or your prior post. I'm not saying it is bad and I do use it for other games which it does very well but I find NMM worked, still works and will continue to work so why break it ![]() If Vortex does the same, then I uninstall, reinstall still the same so I have to Bash or NMM to activate. There are comments that it doesn't activate ESL's but you click the tab and instantly activate and deactivate any mod. Use this same method to tweak any setting that isn't to your preference.Originally posted by Sauro:I've been using the community version of NMM for all of my current 200 hours of Fallout 4 and it has not had a single issue thus far. If you don't like them, set this value to "0" either in-game or by tweaking the enbeffect.fx file in your root directory. The most common settings players tweak is "LETERBOX_BARS," a setting that enables black bars on the top and bottom of your screen. You can tweak with any setting you want in here. In-game, press "shift" and "enter" to open the ENB menu. You can manually alter an ENB's properties yourself. Suppose you install an ENB that has some settings you don't like, fret not. Launch Fallout 4 through your mod manager to see how it looks. If it needs to override any files, allow the ENB to do so. You'll want to drop all of the mod's files into your Fallout 4 root directory. You want to select "Manual Download" for an ENB. Now that your binaries are installed, download an ENB off the Nexus website. The ENB you'll install through your mod manager will take care of the remaining files. As with console modding, you'll also have to keep track of your game's load order as you add mods. After you've installed a manager and linked it, you only need to complete steps three through seven. You'll only need to complete the first two steps once. Wait for the install process to complete.Enter your mod manager and double-click on the mod you download.Click the "Download with Manager" button.Link your mod manager to your Nexus Mods account (most mod managers guide you through this). ![]()
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