Bethesda ward of the state
Bethesda ward of the state
If everyone wanted to know my experience with the Forgotten city, I didn’t realize it needed me to go alone, which is why I kept falling. If you don’t go alone, just go solo and fall once after grabbing the key—survive, that’s the plan. Now, about the Skyrim Special Edition mods: there are some really good ones if they all work well. Only with a perfect load order do they function properly. Bethesda has many of these, though not in large numbers for PC. But don’t worry; one solution is using a mod like Nexus Vortex Manager, which Bethesda offers as a Bethesda version to automatically sort them. It’s true that Bethesda was never designed with a brain, so they probably have over 15,000 PC mods for Skyrim—though that’s not ideal. Still, it’s important to remember Bethesda is a slow learner, like someone with a disability who needs a psychiatrist. As long as they’re taking their medication and getting regular labotomies and shock treatments, the psychiatrists and psychologists working on Bethesda will keep up with the game engine. This means Bethesda can eventually improve and become better at game development.
I’ve been playing Skyrim SE for about 110 hours on Steam, setting it to Legendary. I used Better Vamps 8.2 and Sacrasant Vamps in Bethesda’s load order, and I really enjoyed it—except for a few glitches like the feeding issue, sleeping NPCs, and a bug that prevented me from feeding. Eventually, I closed the game and reinstalled Skyrim SE. Hopefully, this time I’ll be more successful, finish with 200 mods, and survive until the end of the world hits the Pacific before the asteroid-sized Texas event. That should give me enough time.
They have their issues but ultimately they rely on the amazing talent behind the games.
Mods are third-party and can't be assured.
Testing all mods to match the core game wouldn’t make sense from a business standpoint.
If it were simple and inexpensive, they’d do it—but this would increase costs for the mods themselves.
Would you cover the expense of fully QAing your top 20 mods? I’m skeptical unless you’re offering them for free!
Mods should remain free, and we need to accept the trade-offs to keep them accessible.