Deleted48617533User Posted November 2, 2017 Author Share Posted November 2, 2017 I have not used it but I have read that Civil War Overhaul is rather finicky concerning what mods it plays well with. Perhaps if you moved it to the bottom of your load order it may clear up some problems.That also didn't help the glitch with the imperial leader at Whiterun or it didn't stop the crashing :/ . Should I revert back to my regular load order? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Grospolina Posted November 2, 2017 Share Posted November 2, 2017 I did what I was told to do on the website ENBoost website and the game runs fine. I previously tried using M ENB on the Nexus. My video card is the AMD Radeon R6 Graphics card. ExpandSystemMemoryx64 is set to false already. I am also on Windows 10 and I always update my computer so I should have it. I also subtracted 350 from the number I got on boris's VRamTestTool. I'll try deleting my Skyrim.ini and SkyrimPrefs.ini (I'll back it up.)Sounds good. A Radeon R6? I guess you're on a laptop then. That card is... not all that great. I wouldn't recommend running an ENB on it. Keep ENBoost though (just set UsePatchSpeedhackWithoutGraphics=true). You might be running out of RAM with that load order. You could try running Skyrim Performance Monitor to see if you are maxing out on RAM, VRAM, etc. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kroekr Posted November 2, 2017 Share Posted November 2, 2017 I have not used it but I have read that Civil War Overhaul is rather finicky concerning what mods it plays well with. Perhaps if you moved it to the bottom of your load order it may clear up some problems.That also didn't help the glitch with the imperial leader at Whiterun or it didn't stop the crashing :/ . Should I revert back to my regular load order? If that is what LOOT tells you, I do not see why not. Since the mod page is gone, I cannot read it to see where the mod authors says it should go. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Deleted48617533User Posted November 2, 2017 Author Share Posted November 2, 2017 I did what I was told to do on the website ENBoost website and the game runs fine. I previously tried using M ENB on the Nexus. My video card is the AMD Radeon R6 Graphics card. ExpandSystemMemoryx64 is set to false already. I am also on Windows 10 and I always update my computer so I should have it. I also subtracted 350 from the number I got on boris's VRamTestTool. I'll try deleting my Skyrim.ini and SkyrimPrefs.ini (I'll back it up.)Sounds good. A Radeon R6? I guess you're on a laptop then. That card is... not all that great. I wouldn't recommend running an ENB on it. Keep ENBoost though (just set UsePatchSpeedhackWithoutGraphics=true). You might be running out of RAM with that load order. You could try running Skyrim Performance Monitor to see if you are maxing out on RAM, VRAM, etc. https://gyazo.com/dd7072c24a3fdaa683c6495cb8f347b9 Here's my charts after Skyrim crashed. That may be the problem. Every time I fast travel the VRAM and RAM usage gets higher. The RAM went to about 912 MB and the VRAM at about 372. And UsePatchSpeedhackWithoutGraphics is set to true already. Thanks again for all the help! I can't wait to get this all figured out. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Grospolina Posted November 3, 2017 Share Posted November 3, 2017 Yeah, so you have 8 GB of RAM, but 1 GB is shared as VRAM. You may want to disable Open Cities. It uses up quite a bit of RAM, as far as I know. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Deleted48617533User Posted November 4, 2017 Author Share Posted November 4, 2017 So I think that did the trick! I'm not experiencing anymore crashes when I fast travel or in general. I've noticed when I first loaded the game the RAM was in the mid 700's to late 700's when I started (in MB). Then as I played it went to the mid 800's and late 800's to the mid 900's to the late 900's. The VRAM was in the 250's to 350's during the whole play time. Is this normal and may I have some more tips for beginner Skyrim modders? For instance is it okay to add mods when your already in a play through? Any advice would be really helpful. As you know I'm on a lower quality computer. Thanks again! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Deleted48617533User Posted November 4, 2017 Author Share Posted November 4, 2017 So I think that did the trick! I'm not experiencing anymore crashes when I fast travel or in general. I've noticed when I first loaded the game the RAM was in the mid 700's to late 700's when I started (in MB). Then as I played it went to the mid 800's and late 800's to the mid 900's to the late 900's. The VRAM was in the 250's to 350's during the whole play time. Is this normal and may I have some more tips for beginner Skyrim modders? For instance is it okay to add mods when your already in a play through? Any advice would be really helpful. As you know I'm on a lower quality computer. Thanks again! So I think that did the trick! I'm not experiencing anymore crashes when I fast travel or in general. I've noticed when I first loaded the game the RAM was in the mid 700's to late 700's when I started (in MB). Then as I played it went to the mid 800's and late 800's to the mid 900's to the late 900's. The VRAM was in the 250's to 350's during the whole play time. Is this normal and may I have some more tips for beginner Skyrim modders? For instance is it okay to add mods when your already in a play through? Any advice would be really helpful. As you know I'm on a lower quality computer. Thanks again! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Grospolina Posted November 4, 2017 Share Posted November 4, 2017 I'm glad it's working for you! That RAM usage seems reasonable to me for your computer. You can add mods during a playthrough, but you have to be careful about your load order (and your RAM, I suppose!) and conflicts. Always be sure to read the mod's Description page and check for any stickied messages in the Posts section. Try to be aware of any patches that are needed with your current mods. Problems may arise if you uninstall mods in the middle of a playthrough though. Leftover scripts can be left in your save and cause all sorts of headaches. Sometimes a save game cleaner can help, but it can also screw you up. And try to keep quite a few old saves around, so you can go back if something breaks. If you actually want to play the game, then it's best not to install too many mods in the middle of the playthrough. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bejanteen Posted November 4, 2017 Share Posted November 4, 2017 clear everything you have and try these, then add what you had before one at a time to check for errors. -skse ini pre-download for lazy users-unofficial skyrim patch-crash fixes -netimmerse override-ssme-safety load-load game CTD fix ::::: now i would recoment removing texture mods from nexus and steam and add (yes one at a time) to check if they give problems. other than that godspeed. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts