Hip Hop
Member
Will there be a discount for owners of the base game?
Don't know, but you might as well get the DLC on a sale,
it's sure to be cheaper than buying the game separate.
Will there be a discount for owners of the base game?
Need to see how this impacts current mods though. I have about ~120 installed, would hate to lose them.
Do we know the price of the Special Edition?Don't know, but you might as well get the DLC on a sale,
it's sure to be cheaper than buying the game separate.
Do we know the price of the Special Edition?
Do we know the price of the Special Edition?
$60 on consoles
Damn.It's $60 on Amazon (consoles version).
I tried VorpX with Skyrim on DK2 a few months ago and I was in awe when that dragon at the beginning smashed down in front of you. Exhilarating. Unfortunately the game was not really playable as keybinds/controller buttons acted up every few minutes... I eventually gave up but it was kinda nice. Can't wait to see what FO4 will be like with official support!hmmm, I might jump back into skyrim.
has anyone tried any VR mods?
Don't know, but you might as well get the DLC on a sale,
it's sure to be cheaper than buying the game separate.
Fallout 4 doesn't have Denuvo.
And we have to assume the new Skyrim will use Bethesda.net because of console mods.
That's reasonable, and something I assume also. But what will happen with Steam Workshop mods? Will there be any support at all, and will even the old normal version that does support them be available for purchase?
Bethesda kept the original Doom 3 + expansion on sale even though BFG is out
Doom, by Bethesda, released after Fallout 4 have it.
That's reasonable, and something I assume also. But what will happen with Steam Workshop mods? Will there be any support at all, and will even the old normal version that does support them be available for purchase?
I wonder if the changes are merely cosmetic? They're can always be more room for bug fixing or balancing in behalf of Bethesda.
Bethesda doing a cool thing right now. PC players brag about the special edition just looking like a heavily modded PC game but I would gladly have it done by the developers and not deal with modding.
Modding Bethesda games is literally drag and drop. There's absolutely nothing to it.
No it's not. There's also considering load orders and compatibility issues especially with those mods that require script extenders. Then there's those times when the games start crashing or won't load and you left with individually troubleshooting each mod to figure out what's wrong.
That's why I'm glad we're getting an official graphics overhaul from Bethesda themselves.
This is coming from a guy who played heavily modded versions of every Bethesda open world since Morrowind.
SKSE (script extender) is literally one button install.No it's not. There's also considering load orders and compatibility issues especially with those mods that require script extenders. Then there's those times when the games would start CTD or won't load and you left with individually troubleshooting each mod to figure out what's wrong.
That's why I'm glad I'm glad the PC version getting an official graphics overhaul from Bethesda themselves. Won't have to jump through hoops.
This is coming from a guy who played heavily modded versions of every Bethesda open world since Morrowind.
All the popular mod managers handle load orders for you. SKSE is like 20kb and goes in one folder and solves all script extending needs forever. Mod pages list compatibility conflicts; it's on the user to know if there will be a conflict before downloading/using with other mods.
This isn't rocket science. There are very few modern games/engines that are this easy to mod.
It is ridiculously easy until something fails, then it becomes a nightmare. The general instability of the game doesn't help much either. It's still a much better world than what Oblivion and Fallout 3 / NV left us, though.
Out of curiousity, does this special edition really offer much to PC owners that they couldn't already got out of existing mods?
I recently bought Legendary edition but haven't touched it, and based on the amount of visual improvement people have brought to the game through mods, I don't know exactly what business a 'remastered special edition' really has on the platform besides making another stupidly large chunk of cash.
I asked in the other thread but, presumably the 'normal' skyrim version with mods will still be the best way to play this?
The modded vanilla version certainly looks better than the remastered footage
It doesn't really offer anything, which is why it's being given away. Charging people for a version that a) will probably not have access to most mods at launch and b) looks even worse than a modded version, it would be ridículous to charge for a upgrade.Out of curiousity, does this special edition really offer much to PC owners that they couldn't already got out of existing mods?
I recently bought Legendary edition but haven't touched it, and based on the amount of visual improvement people have brought to the game through mods, I don't know exactly what business a 'remastered special edition' really has on the platform besides making another stupidly large chunk of cash.
It will be unless the new version somehow gets better mods due to engine upgrades.
Out of curiousity, does this special edition really offer much to PC owners that they couldn't already got out of existing mods?
I recently bought Legendary edition but haven't touched it, and based on the amount of visual improvement people have brought to the game through mods, I don't know exactly what business a 'remastered special edition' really has on the platform besides making another stupidly large chunk of cash.
I purchased Skyrim when it first released and decided on skipping all of the DLC. The free upgrade announcement makes one thing clear for me... never buy another vanilla Bethesda game until the complete edition is released.