I activated the Nexus mod manager, turned on the mods and their plugins, and learned how to start them within the game.
I activated the Nexus mod manager, turned on the mods and their plugins, and learned how to start them within the game.
Set up the configuration files correctly using fallout4.ini, fallout4prefs.ini and fallout custom.ini. Once done, enable the mods and you can launch it from any platform such as Steam, EXE or NMM without issues, even with over 120 mods installed.
You're at Step 8. The next action is to modify the Fallout4Custom.ini file by adding the specified lines for bInvalidateOlderFiles and resource data directories.
Under the [archive] section, add "bInvalidateOlderFiles=1" and "sResourceDataDirsFinal=" on separate lines. Save the file and exit.
If you right-click it, the message says "uninstall mod." You've already edited the .ini file. When you open Fallout 4 via NMM, you're still seeing vanilla.
It’s good to verify if the mods you have are compatible with your game version. Certain modifications need extra actions, such as the customization mod which demands executing a specific file first.