RyanEll Posted September 28, 2011 Share Posted September 28, 2011 Hello, although I've been trying to bare with it for the past couple of days, It's starting to annoy me. I recently just started a Moonshadow Elf, along with this, I wanted to retexture the body (Something I've never done in the past) With this : http://www.tesnexus.com/downloads/file.php?id=32448# I followed what it said, as v5 Beta of Roberts Male Body has been took down from tesnexus, I found it on "Slof's Hive" and installed it, I then put in the required folders from http://www.tesnexus.com/downloads/file.php?id=32448# then started up my game, when I took off the shirt I was wearing, I got this...http://i.imgur.com/vrSmb.jpgCould anyone give me a solution to this? It would be appreciated, thanks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MShoap13 Posted September 28, 2011 Share Posted September 28, 2011 Try uninstalling RM v5 and installing RM v4. On a side note, all of those jacked up icons in your inventory generally indicate a hardware issue which could also be causing the issue with your character. Is your hardware OCed? If so, try running Oblivion on stock speeds. It could also be that you didn't install whatever mod those items are from properly. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RyanEll Posted September 28, 2011 Author Share Posted September 28, 2011 On 9/28/2011 at 5:16 PM, MShoap13 said: Try uninstalling RM v5 and installing RM v4. On a side note, all of those jacked up icons in your inventory generally indicate a hardware issue which could also be causing the issue with your character. Is your hardware OCed? If so, try running Oblivion on stock speeds. It could also be that you didn't install whatever mod those items are from properly.I was using RM v4 Before I went to RM v5, I've tried both.Secondly, I know nothing to do with hardware. So elaborating on what they are, would help.Thanks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DrakeTheDragon Posted September 28, 2011 Share Posted September 28, 2011 What means for Archive Invalidation are you using, if any, and in which location is your game installed? Which OS are you on? And is it Oblivion from Steam or retail disc? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RyanEll Posted September 28, 2011 Author Share Posted September 28, 2011 On 9/28/2011 at 10:40 PM, DrakeTheDragon said: What means for Archive Invalidation are you using, if any, and in which location is your game installed? Which OS are you on? And is it Oblivion from Steam or retail disc?I downloaded rhe Archive Invalidation, but wasn't sure if I had to do something beyond installation, I googled, didn't find anything, tried looking on youtube, didn't find many guides on there either. It's in C:\Program Files (x86)\Steam\steamapps\common\oblivion As I've got the GOTY Edition from Steam. I'm running of Vista (Unsure of which specific version) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MShoap13 Posted September 29, 2011 Share Posted September 29, 2011 Are you running Windows Vista/7 and is your /Steam/ directory in the default location (C:\Program Files\)? If so, Windows UAC is known to cause all kinds of issues while modding Oblivion and it's highly recommended to go ahead and move steam to somewhere Windows UAC doesn't affect, like C:\Games and reinstall Oblivion. If you're on XP you can skip all of this as Windows UAC isn't implemented. The next step for a Steam installation is to use File Date Changer to roll back the "Last Modified" dates of all of the .bsa archives that come in your Vanilla Oblivion install (plus the DLC of course) to somewhere around 2005. This is necessary for BSA Redirection to work properly. Then, go ahead and install OBMM and/or Wrye Bash and run BSA Redirection as your form of Archive Invalidation one time. Without using some form of Archive Invalidation Oblivion has problems with using user created textures and animations instead of the vanilla content. BSA Redirection is the best solution to Archive Invalidation as it's practically fool proof and never needs to be updated after you've done it once. From here, be sure to make at least one character save in Oblivion so that you have a known working standard. I personally recommend playing through the tutorial dungeon (the sewers) up until right before the exit that allows you to change your character's aspects and keeping that save around permanently. This gives you a good testing base for adding mods in the future and you never have to play through the sewers again. Now you're ready to start modding. I'd say take it easy and try something simple like a sword or a simple texture replacer and then go ensure that it's actually taking effect in your game. Moving on you can add other mods, though I recommend installing them one or two at a time and trying them out for a little bit before adding more. This way when an issue does occur (and it's bound to happen) you'll have a pretty good idea of where to start troubleshooting. Here's a list of mods I'd recommend for any Oblivion install whether you're after grossly modded content or not:The Unofficial Oblivion Patch and the Unofficial Patch Supplementals (Be sure to get the Shivering Isles patch for SI and the Unofficial Official Mods Patch for any other DLC you may be running)Darn UI or Dark Darn UINatural Environments or All NaturalMiniMap Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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