thumbincubation Posted May 13, 2017 Share Posted May 13, 2017 By xedit, I mean SSEedit, TES5edit, etc.. They call it xedit it some of their descriptions, because if I understand it correctly, it's basically the same program. It is available for SSE, here on nexus http://www.nexusmods.com/skyrimspecialedition/mods/164/? and the description page has a few different tutorial links. It's quite handy. The important thing to remember is you're loading all the mods at once only to see if it finds a conflict. NEVER try to clean them all at once. Here's the video tutorial, by gopher, I used back in Oldrim, when I first learned how to clean the mods. This is where I learned to load them all at once to find conflicts, but I don't see much reference to it recently, so bear in mind that it may not be 100% accurate or just not a popular method. As long as you don't make any changes, though, loading it just to see what happens is harmless. I actually load all my mods, whenever I need to weed out too many items in a leveled list, when wrye bash combines them. Basically, you're looking to see if it gets through the whole load order, or stops loading due to a conflict, to give you an idea which mod to take a closer look at. http://www.creationkit.com/index.php?title=TES5Edit_Cleaning_Guide_-_TES5Edit Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Phantom9621 Posted May 16, 2017 Author Share Posted May 16, 2017 By xedit, I mean SSEedit, TES5edit, etc.. They call it xedit it some of their descriptions, because if I understand it correctly, it's basically the same program. It is available for SSE, here on nexus http://www.nexusmods.com/skyrimspecialedition/mods/164/? and the description page has a few different tutorial links. It's quite handy. The important thing to remember is you're loading all the mods at once only to see if it finds a conflict. NEVER try to clean them all at once. Here's the video tutorial, by gopher, I used back in Oldrim, when I first learned how to clean the mods. This is where I learned to load them all at once to find conflicts, but I don't see much reference to it recently, so bear in mind that it may not be 100% accurate or just not a popular method. As long as you don't make any changes, though, loading it just to see what happens is harmless. I actually load all my mods, whenever I need to weed out too many items in a leveled list, when wrye bash combines them. Basically, you're looking to see if it gets through the whole load order, or stops loading due to a conflict, to give you an idea which mod to take a closer look at. http://www.creationkit.com/index.php?title=TES5Edit_Cleaning_Guide_-_TES5EditAh, after some thought. That is what I figured you were talking about. already did that. other then some few (may be dup items/codes) and the thing alike. Noting critical. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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