F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Issues related to NMM

Issues related to NMM

Issues related to NMM

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mccoop03
Posting Freak
910
05-10-2025, 03:00 PM
#21
I’m feeling really frustrated. Even after thoroughly cleaning the HDD and making sure no game or NMM traces remained, I still got NMM back and all my mods were still there! I tried uninstalling them again, but it crashed once more. I’m not sure how to win this situation. TraceLog20161209075752.txt
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mccoop03
05-10-2025, 03:00 PM #21

I’m feeling really frustrated. Even after thoroughly cleaning the HDD and making sure no game or NMM traces remained, I still got NMM back and all my mods were still there! I tried uninstalling them again, but it crashed once more. I’m not sure how to win this situation. TraceLog20161209075752.txt

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StreetHobo
Senior Member
568
05-10-2025, 04:32 PM
#22
The issue appears to be related to a denied access request. You're running in admin mode and encountered an exception when trying to access a folder. It seems the system is refusing permission for that path. Check the folder permissions and ensure you have the necessary rights. If you need further help, let me know.
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StreetHobo
05-10-2025, 04:32 PM #22

The issue appears to be related to a denied access request. You're running in admin mode and encountered an exception when trying to access a folder. It seems the system is refusing permission for that path. Check the folder permissions and ensure you have the necessary rights. If you need further help, let me know.

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pauli05
Member
71
05-12-2025, 11:14 AM
#23
Confirmed, the issue stems from the folder being blocked by your Fallout data meshes. Removing a CBBE mod previously caused problems, so the same folder restriction is likely the cause. Check if any other mods or settings are interfering.
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pauli05
05-12-2025, 11:14 AM #23

Confirmed, the issue stems from the folder being blocked by your Fallout data meshes. Removing a CBBE mod previously caused problems, so the same folder restriction is likely the cause. Check if any other mods or settings are interfering.

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Devon_playz
Member
131
05-14-2025, 06:14 AM
#24
I attempted to navigate to properties, security, and verify full access to the folder, but received this message: http://prntscr.com/dhaygu
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Devon_playz
05-14-2025, 06:14 AM #24

I attempted to navigate to properties, security, and verify full access to the folder, but received this message: http://prntscr.com/dhaygu

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Fretti0_YTB
Member
196
05-15-2025, 04:05 AM
#25
When installing certain modifications in a Bethesda title, you might find numerous files scattered across various directories like Data, textures, meshes, scripts, etc. Fully deleting a mod manually can be tedious because you must track the original files and know exactly where to go. Files within mods often overlap, so you’ll have to carefully choose whether to replace them or not. This process can quickly become chaotic if you ever try to remove a mod that previously overwrote another’s file, leaving it missing entirely. Managing more than 50 mods—especially in games like Skyrim—can turn into a massive headache without additional tools. If simply moving files into an Addons folder would suffice, I’d agree you don’t really need much beyond Windows Explorer. I own many mods for The Witcher 3, but they usually end up in a dedicated mods folder (though a script manager is still useful) making NMM less essential.
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Fretti0_YTB
05-15-2025, 04:05 AM #25

When installing certain modifications in a Bethesda title, you might find numerous files scattered across various directories like Data, textures, meshes, scripts, etc. Fully deleting a mod manually can be tedious because you must track the original files and know exactly where to go. Files within mods often overlap, so you’ll have to carefully choose whether to replace them or not. This process can quickly become chaotic if you ever try to remove a mod that previously overwrote another’s file, leaving it missing entirely. Managing more than 50 mods—especially in games like Skyrim—can turn into a massive headache without additional tools. If simply moving files into an Addons folder would suffice, I’d agree you don’t really need much beyond Windows Explorer. I own many mods for The Witcher 3, but they usually end up in a dedicated mods folder (though a script manager is still useful) making NMM less essential.

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