hauser90 Posted November 12, 2015 Author Share Posted November 12, 2015 haha, it didn´t crash, but it bugged me below the floor level :D Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MathLeBeau Posted November 12, 2015 Share Posted November 12, 2015 Try to start to uninstall SMIM and try your game agains. SMIM was responsable of my CTD. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
postal001 Posted November 12, 2015 Share Posted November 12, 2015 With all those mods, I'm pretty sure you're running out of ram. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MathLeBeau Posted November 12, 2015 Share Posted November 12, 2015 (edited) With all those mods, I'm pretty sure you're running out of ram. He'is right, verify one by one your mod and make sure none is over 4Gb Ram Edited November 12, 2015 by BeauMath Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LeddBate Posted November 12, 2015 Share Posted November 12, 2015 The following is excerpted from my standard troubleshooting guide. Please note that I've left out the parts that you and BeauMath have already discussed (for the most part.) Skyrim Project Stability This isn't a mod but rather a complete guide to stabilizing your game and cleaning up your saves. It's a lot of reading, but this project is what helped transform my buggy game (that crashed every 3 to 5 minutes) into a smooth experience (with improved visuals) that hardly ever crashes. Troubleshooting. After getting the above mods, LOOTing your load order and cleaning up your mods, you might still be experiencing crashes. In your Nexus Mod Manager click on the "Plugins" tab. You will now see your mod's plugins listed with a checkbox next to each one. Uncheck each one EXCEPT FOR THE FOLLOWING: Skyrim.esm, Update.esm, Unofficial Skyrim Patch.esp, Dawnguard.esm, Unofficial Dawnguard Patch.esp, Dragonborn.esm, Unofficial Dragonborn Patch.esp, Hearthfires.esm, Unofficial Hearthfire Patch.esp, SkyUI.esp. Now restart your game. If you can play for (what seems to you) a reasonable amount of time without crashing, then you can rule out game settings as a problem. (See below for more on settings.) Quit out of the game. Go back into NMM and choose one plugin and recheck mark it. Restart your game. Do you crash? Bingo! You just found at least one mod that is giving you a problem. Go to the Mod's page and carefully read it to see what it might be having a problem with. Chances are that you won't crash with the first couple of mods your re-enable. Most likely you will crash when two (or more) mods conflict. This is a tedious way to troubleshoot, true. But it will definitely help you pin-point mod conflicts. This is also why you should resist the urge to activate new mods you've downloaded in groups. Instead, install and activate just ONE mod at first. If you crash, well, you just saved yourself having to look through multiple mods trying to see which one(s) are causing you to crash. Once you've figured out which mods won't work, check their pages to see WHY they won't work. It will usually (but not always) be a conflict with another mod. There may be a patch available to fix the conflict. Maybe the mod is modular and you simply need to re-install with some parts of the mod omitted to prevent a conflict. Read, read, READ the descriptions of each mod and save yourself guesswork. Some mods have patches available that address other mods to prevent conflicts. Sometimes these are "batch" files that cover several other mods (with plug-ins for each mod.) If you don't have one or more of those mods that the batch patch covers, you might be causing ctd when the game goes looking for a master file for that mod that you don't have. The only fix for this (that I know of) is to disable every one of the plug-ins for that batch patch, then re-enable them one at a time and test (as described above.) When you ctd after enabling one of the patch's plug-ins, then you know which one to leave unchecked. Game Settings. I don't know if you're pushing your system too hard. Skyrim may be over three years old, but it's still a pretty demanding game. If all of the above does not stop you from crashing, go into your options and turn settings down a notch (or two) and restart. See if that gives you more stability. NOTE: If you are using SKSE you cannot get into your settings from the SKSE shortcut. instead, either start your game from your TESV.exe Or using the "Launch Skyrim" button in NMM. Either way, click on "Options", adjust your settings down a bit, then try restarting through SKSE again. Saves. As discussed in "Skyrim Project Stability", there is a possibility that your saves have become progressively corrupted -usually by removing mods. Many mods that are removed have leftover scripts imbedded in your saves. As you continue to play (and save, and add more mods, and remove more mods) those scripts try to "fire" and start causing more and more errors until CTDs happen more often. While this is usually a gradual progression, there are "events" (e.g. removing certain mod(s)) that can cause your saves to cross a certain threshold and become far more corrupted. There are ways to "clean" your saves (as discussed in SPS) but this is rarely 100% effective. As MXR said in one of his videos: "Sometimes you just gotta know when to pack that $#!% in and start over back at your last stable save." Good luck! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hauser90 Posted November 12, 2015 Author Share Posted November 12, 2015 Yeah. That is probably one of the many issues I must have :DMy tought process is the following: 1- Running out of Ram.2- Too many HD textures3- Clashing mods (Although I have read every mod page and can´t find incompatibilities among them)4- Just too many mods.5- Script lagg (Deadly Combat + Wet & Cold + Immersive Horses + Sexlab (don´t judge me) + Footprints + Enhanced Blood Textures + God knows what else)6- Skyrim hates me :D Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MathLeBeau Posted November 12, 2015 Share Posted November 12, 2015 PM me on my page if you finaly fix your problem! Good luck! LeddBate give you a good tool to work with! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hauser90 Posted November 12, 2015 Author Share Posted November 12, 2015 (edited) Holy s*** LeddBate! :D That was a very in depth. Thank you. I´m going to start reading the Skyrim Project Optimization Page. See what else I can dig. Maybe I will also cut some of the flashy stuff from my textures and mods. Got a questions bros. Actually two. 1. If a change the Official High Res DLC textures with textures of the same size, there shouldn´t be any performance hit right?2. Do the amount of mods makes a difference on stability? I mean, if I take care of imcompatibilties and harmful s*** with scripts, do the actual amount matters? I know 255 is the max, but hitting that number is just looking for trouble. It´s because my mod count skyrockets by the amount of patches required. Sure thing BeauMath, thanks for all the help bro. Take care Edited November 12, 2015 by hauser90 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LeddBate Posted November 12, 2015 Share Posted November 12, 2015 One last thought: Since you didn't mention the specific model of HP computer you're using, I presume your graphics is only the mobo's integrated graphics, yes? If so, and IF your mobo has a PCI-e x16 lane open on it (and if your mobo supports modern graphics cards) I highly recommend getting a dedicated GPU. Two good possiblities are:Nvidia GTX 960 with 2GB of GDDR5 memory buffer. Running an average of $190.AMD R9 380 with 4GB of GDDR5 memory buffer. Running an average of $230. Personally, I'd go with the R9 380 as modern games are now demanding 3+ GB of VRAM these days. (And that's not even including mods!) My current GPU is a GTX 670 with 2GB of GDDR5 mem buffer. It's a good ol' workhorse, but I'm starting to run into memory issues with all my mods. I'm eyeing the GTX 980 and hoping that prices will come down in a few months. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LeddBate Posted November 12, 2015 Share Posted November 12, 2015 (edited) Holy s*** LeddBate! :D That was a very in depth. Thank you. I´m going to start reading the Skyrim Project Optimization Page. See what else I can dig. Maybe I will also cut some of the flashy stuff from my textures and mods. Got a questions bros. Actually two. 1. If a change the Official High Res DLC textures with textures of the same size, there shouldn´t be any performance hit right?2. Do the amount of mods makes a difference on stability? I mean, if I take care of imcompatibilties and harmful s*** with scripts, do the actual amount matters? I know 255 is the max, but hitting that number is just looking for trouble. It´s because my mod count skyrockets by the amount of patches required. Sure thing BeauMath, thanks for all the help bro. Take care 1) Sorry, don't know. Never did that. Sounds logical though. Maybe someone else could chime in here?2) Yes. Though usually it's the mods that you remove that have a far greater impact. When you here someone say "Make a clean save." -What they mean is to make a save BEFORE you remove and/or add any mods, then see what happens after you "test play" for awhile. If your game gets more unstable, revert to the mods you had previously and go back to that last save to avoid further problems. Edited November 12, 2015 by LeddBate Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts