Germandeathkittiez Posted February 14, 2009 Share Posted February 14, 2009 Okay my last instance of Oblivion got really messed up due to mods so I re-installed it to get the meshes in their correct places. Now I have a completely clean copy of Oblivion - SI - Knights all installed however with old saves which all experienced all of my mods. So, I would get the usual message of "things may have been changed" or w/e (which I did). So I opened the game with OBSE, got that message, but when I went in, everything looked weird and snowy until I realzed the ground was made of a map of whatever city or region I was in and it repeated as one texture in little squares as far as I could see across the horizon. (So when in IC it would have little maps in the ground of the entire Imperial City, and Kvatch would have the stretch from Kvatch to Anvil all over the place) I'm wondering if this is because I accidentally deleted Unofficial Oblivion Patch, or if the lacuna of mods is making these specific files get wacky, but I havent tried a new save yet. But this realllly shouldn't be happening logically my textures would have to be really misplaced......has anyone seen this happen before and can it be fixed. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bben46 Posted February 14, 2009 Share Posted February 14, 2009 It's actually a common enough problem that I have a canned answer. Usually the maps are accompanied by a purple ground texture. Yours may be different though. Purple ground I believe this is caused by a group of files called shaders. These files can be different for different graphics cards. If they somehow get the wrong shaders installed one of the results is the terrain in the foreground is purple. The shader package is based on your particular graphics card and is installed when you first install Oblivion. Any changes should only be made by people who are experienced with Graphics shaders. If you want more information on shaders, google it. I have seen 3 possible fixes for this problem. The easiest is to go into your in game menu, (esc key) select video and make sure your texture size is set to large. The second involved the textures from unique landscapes. reinstalling them fixed it. The third involves loading patches in the wrong order and the only way to fix that one is to reinstall in the right order. Note that the oblivion uninstaller leaves behind your saves, mods (data) and some entries in the Windows registry. These will still be there after you have reinstalled. So if You have a problem with a mod causing the problem or a bad save or a bad Registry entry, The problem may still be there. My recommended uninstall and reinstall leaves you with a clean install. And your original mods and saves in a separate folder that you can put back into the new game. Or you can start over and install your mods again. See the next section for my recommendation for uninstalling and reinstalling Oblivion. Please leave some feedback to let me know what works. Thanks Bben46 Complete Reinstall Procedure for Oblivion This is usually a last resort and your game is already trashed. I cannot be responsible for any damage you manage to do to your game when trying this. You are free to use this procedure and post it as you see fit. When you uninstall Oblivion it doesn't really uninstall everything. Then when you start adding mods before you have started the game, some things may not get initialized properly. Here is my recommended procedure for uninstalling and reinstalling. The game uninstaller does not remove your mods, save games or Oblivion.ini or the entries that the original installation of Oblivion placed in your Windows registry. It also does not remove helper programs such as OBSE, OBMM, Wrye Bash, The construction set or any other programs you have installed in the \Oblivion folder or the save game folder. I recommend that you go ahead and delete them, then re download and install the latest version of them again later. After you have verified that the game works. I would appreciate any feedback on this as it is something I expect to post often and I hate to give bogus or useless information. Uninstalling Oblivion DO NOT DELETE THE GAME FOLDERS YET! This is very important.If you delete them,it causes problems later. My instructions assume you are using Windows XP and have installed Oblivion into the default location. If you are using Vista or Linux, the file locations may be different, however, the procedure will be the same. For a full reinstall, first you can try to preserve your mods and save games. I recommend that you save them in a new folder with a new name. Create the new folder in C:\Backup_Oblivion - or any other name you will remember, just as long as it is not in the programs folder. Then copy the data folder where your mods are to the new folder - do not erase them, copy them. And in the new folder, rename the \data folder to \olddata. Then copy and rename the folder that has your saved games and Oblivion.ini, C:\documents and settings\your user name\my documents\My Games\oblivion to something like \My games\Old Oblivion - this saves your saved games and the oblivion.ini file. Then, using the original CD, NOT the Launcher on your Hard drive. Select uninstall. After it completes the uninstall, reboot your computer - this is important as it allows Windows to remove some references to the original Oblivion. This would be the time to erase all of the helper programs you have in the \Oblivion folder. Such as OBMM, OBSE and some others. The simplest way is to delete the folder completely. The new install will re create the folder for you along with a fresh oblivion.ini and when you start the game and make a save, a new save folder and new \data folder. Now you can delete the game folders if you want to do a complete fresh reinstall. Your original saved games & mods are backed up if you want to try to resurrect them later. To remove the registry entries that were left behind. If all else fails, this usually works to resurrect your game. I do not recommend manually editing the registry unless you know what you are doing. A mistake here could make your entire computer unusable. There are several good programs for removing left behind entries. The one I use is ccleaner. Be sure to reboot before using it, and again after. It is free and available here: http://majorgeeks.com/download4191.html This would also be a good time to do a file clean up. Run the built in Windows 'Disk Cleanup' routine. If you uses the ccleaner, most of this has already been done, but it won't hurt to do it anyway. Now that everything is cleaned up, do a full defrag on your hard drive to leave a large uncluttered area to reinstall to. This prevents your game from installing in a fragmented way, with parts scattered all over the drive. It also will speed up the install a little. It takes a while, but may speed up you game as well as the rest of your computer. Now to Reinstall. Again using the original CD, install Oblivion. NOTE: If you are using Vista, DO NOT install to the default directory. Instead make a new directory I recommend C:\Games. Install Oblivion there to avoid the hassle with Vista UAC blocking mods. Before adding any mods, patches, helper programs, Shivering Isles or anything else, start the game and make a save. This initializes some stuff that needs to be initialized. If you are using the Game of the Year version of Oblivion you should not need any patches, skip the patching part. Now, If you DO NOT use Shivering Isles, patch the game using ONLY the latest Oblivion patch. All of the stuff from the earlier patches is included. Be sure you use the proper language patch. If you use the wrong one it may work, but with a strange mixture of languages. (Germanglish?) Or it may crash. NOTE: there are two English Patches UK & US and they are different. (Some people actually think we speak the same language) Use the one that matches your original disk. If you use Shivering Isles, Install it now. DO NOT install the Oblivion patch. Install Shivering Isles, then ONLY the latest Shivering Isles patch. All of the updates for Oblivion are included. There is only one Shivering Isles patch for both US & UK English (Maybe sometimes we do speak the same language.) Now, again start the game, make sure it looks right, move around a little to test it, and make a save. Test to be sure everything is working right (No purple objects or yellow blocks) Before adding any mods, back up both your \data folder and the save game folder. Copy them, don't move or rename them, to a different folder - such as \Bethesda\Clean Oblivion\data and \Bethesda\clean Oblivion\saves. Note that this is a different folder than the one used for your old data and saves. Note, Your Oblivion.ini file is in the same folder, but separate from, the save game folder. Now, if you want to try to run with your old mods, first rename the original folders. The \data folder to \newdata and the \oldata back to \data. this restores all of your mods. You should now have 2 data folders \data, and \newdata in your \oblivion folder To restore your original saves and ini file, rename the new My Games\Oblivion to something like \New Oblivion. and the \Old oblivion to \oblivion - this restores all of your saved games and your original Oblivion.ini file. DO NOT erase the files you renamed. These are your backup files in case the original mods do not work or give you the same problem. If you have the same problem, it is most likely caused by a mod. However, you now have a clean install to fall back on. You can You can COPY (NOT move or rename) the backup files back to what they were and be back to your clean install without having to reinstall again. Sounds like lots of work, but you will have a clean install and a back up clean install when you are finished. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Germandeathkittiez Posted February 14, 2009 Author Share Posted February 14, 2009 OK I reinstalled the game normally not completely and this time it downgraded my version of Oblivion back to the old version so I couldn't use OBSE. I installed the game to a new folder, though, (the first time, when I encountered the maps) because I couldnt get rid of OBSE and the Data folder. After installing it I had cut and pasted OBSE into the new Oblivion folder. Without using OBSE, the map problem is fixed. So OBSE was most likely the problem. It would be helpful if you could tell me why I can't delete OBSE, but for now I'm gonna move it and redownload. Thanks for the help on the clean install, it's very informative and I'll let you know if I have any more issues. EDIT: nvm about OBSE I fixed it. And no more maps too :D Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Palpenious Posted February 17, 2009 Share Posted February 17, 2009 Strange, I had the same problem a while back which ended up being a shader replacement. Once I put the original shaders back, all the ground was normal again, but I thought, why would shaders change the ground texture? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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