lordofshwart Posted Monday at 06:43 PM Share Posted Monday at 06:43 PM I have tried modding in the past, but it led to some undesirable results. So, the genuine question is, what exact SSE update is the definitive update to mod on? I'm asking for some modders who know the game like the back of their hand. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
showler Posted Monday at 07:14 PM Share Posted Monday at 07:14 PM You have two choices. Either use the 1.5.97 version that was the last release before the "Anniversary Edition" or use the most current version. Both have issues but they can be avoided if you pay attention. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scorrp10 Posted Monday at 08:48 PM Share Posted Monday at 08:48 PM My recommendation is to get the latest version available. Which is, via Steam, is 1.6.1170. It has been around for enough time that all the major SKSE plugin-based mods have been adapted to it. Unless there is a very specific mod that you just got to have, and there is no viable alternative, and it is ONLY available for an older version - well, that's that. Get that latest version, launch it via Steam (assuming it is via Steam) once, then set up your mod manager (Vortex or MO2), get SKSE64 installed, so that you launch the game using SKSE via mod manager. Then you want to set Skyrim SE in Steam to update only when you launch the game (via Steam) - which you will never do. So that when/if Bethesda updates the game again, your setup does not get messed up. Then get the rest of the mods you are interested in. I personally am still on version 1.6.1130 simply because updating to 1170 will require a whole bunch of mod updates, and will not bring me any tangible benefit. If a new version has features I really want, I will wait until all relevant to me mods get updated, then I will update the game and go through the hassle of all the updates. So, in a nutshell - get the latest at the time you start. Be sure to get the latest versions of the mods. Then, lock your version in and stick with it. Update only when you deem necessary. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lordofshwart Posted Wednesday at 12:19 AM Author Share Posted Wednesday at 12:19 AM On 11/18/2024 at 3:48 PM, scorrp10 said: My recommendation is to get the latest version available. Which is, via Steam, is 1.6.1170. It has been around for enough time that all the major SKSE plugin-based mods have been adapted to it. Unless there is a very specific mod that you just got to have, and there is no viable alternative, and it is ONLY available for an older version - well, that's that. Get that latest version, launch it via Steam (assuming it is via Steam) once, then set up your mod manager (Vortex or MO2), get SKSE64 installed, so that you launch the game using SKSE via mod manager. Then you want to set Skyrim SE in Steam to update only when you launch the game (via Steam) - which you will never do. So that when/if Bethesda updates the game again, your setup does not get messed up. Then get the rest of the mods you are interested in. I personally am still on version 1.6.1130 simply because updating to 1170 will require a whole bunch of mod updates, and will not bring me any tangible benefit. If a new version has features I really want, I will wait until all relevant to me mods get updated, then I will update the game and go through the hassle of all the updates. So, in a nutshell - get the latest at the time you start. Be sure to get the latest versions of the mods. Then, lock your version in and stick with it. Update only when you deem necessary. honest if they in the future make another update that f's up the mods we install then this advice is great, thanks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ModEnjoyer52 Posted Wednesday at 07:29 PM Share Posted Wednesday at 07:29 PM I recommend the latest version, also to use your mod manager to tag (in MO2 it's 'categories') each mod that requires a new version on Bethesda update. Trust me, all you have to do is filter by that category and it saves a lot of time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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