Jump to content

DukeofDingos

Members
  • Posts

    2
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Nexus Mods Profile

About DukeofDingos

DukeofDingos's Achievements

Newbie

Newbie (1/14)

  • First Post
  • Conversation Starter
  • Week One Done
  • One Month Later
  • One Year In

Recent Badges

0

Reputation

  1. No worries, I know you're not being mean. I'm just curious about what specific action people take in that situation. I'm not currently setting up any mods after a successful run of modding, but definitely ran into situations where, say, I installed a full flora overhaul then found some trees I specifically liked after the fact, and used those to overwrite the overhaul textures. I'm very careful with it, and haven't had trouble yet. But I'm not looking for help on it. That wasn't the point. I'm actually curious to know precisely what people do in that situation. In your case, what do you do? What do you do when you hit a conflict?
  2. Hey everyone! I was recently re-modding a new install of Skyrim via the NMM, when a question popped into my head, so I thought I'd ask you fine folks what your experience has been with this. When installing multiple texture mods, sometimes there are file conflicts. Usually it happens when a new mod you're installing tries to overwrite files that earlier installed texture packs/mods had installed. The client then gives you a pop up window with options. You can overwrite/not overwrite a single file, or overwrite/not overwrite the conflicts for that particular earlier installed mod, or overwrite/not overwrite all the conflicted files. Personally, I always choose to overwrite/not overwrite per mod, as I know the mods I install are generally specialized texture packs that I chose and prefer to keep intact. Do any of you perform your overwrites on a file by file basis? Or even choose to overwrite all, rather than individually or by mod?
×
×
  • Create New...