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ENB Breaking Weapon Scopes


llloyd

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Hello! When ever I try to use a scope on a scoped weapon the scope starts off clear then quickly fills in with white. If I hit Shift-F12 to disable the ENB it fixes it. How do i fix this and keep the ENB active?

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Nope. Went down the list and tried everything, still does it.

 

Went into FalloutNVLauncher, made sure AA and Antistropic Filtering were both off, disabled Water Displacement, exited

Checked the Documents/My Games/FalloutNV Fallout.ini and made sure IMultiSample was = 0, it is

Right clicked on the game in Steam and unchecked both the Steam Overlays and Use Desktop Game Theater options

In game I Shift+Enter , unchecked AO and Detailed Shadows, Save, Apply , closed and reopened to be sure, and both remain unchecked

And I loaded up the ENBLocal.ini and made sure "Fix for Transparency Bug" is = 0 and it is

 

And it still washes out, like when you see a movie film burn through affect, that obscures my scopes.

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Try turning on the ENB transparency fix. It helps some people, and turning it off helps others.

 

Try running the game in "offline mode". You only need to launch the "Steam Client". Once it displays the Steam "Game status screen" with how many hours you have played so far, you can minimize that and run the game from a desktop shortcut. See 'Issue: How to disable the Steam Overlay' under the 'Solutions to Starting the game problems' section in the wiki "Fallout NV Mod Conflict Troubleshooting" guide.

 

-Dubious-

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I run the game from the Nexus launcher as I use FNV4GB and NVSE along with the ENB. And I had the Transparency Fix set to True at first and set it to False to test and it was still broken. I've since unchecked the Use Steam Overlay checkbox during the above round of testing.

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As disabling ENB clears up the problem, it is almost a certainty that it is related to ENB. Everything I know about ENB is in the "Troubleshooting" guide, so I'm afraid I am out of other ideas, except that it might be related to the "depth of field (DOF)" setting in the pre-set you are using.

 

You might want to ask in the ENB Technical Support forum. I would be interested in hearing about any solution that eventually fixes this.

 

-Dubious-

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That is a "security warning" from your browser. It does mean the site is not using secure logins, but you can override that warning if you desire and login anyway. Click on the "learn more" part of the warning and it should tell you how to override.

 

I would definitely use a "unique" password for an unsecure site. One that will not be used anywhere else for if it should get intercepted it won't give anyone access to any other site or account. As you aren't doing anything really sensitive on that site, having it get compromised is no big deal in that instance.

 

-Dubious-

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Various web browsers over time evolve what they consider "secure" protocols. Eventually they say "we used to support this protocol, but now think it too insecure and now require this one or we give you a warning". The change is usually on the browser side, not the web site. A site with non-sensitive or non-critical information may drag it's feet switching to a more secure protocol. It's more common than you might think. By using a "throwaway" account name and password on every site, you can limit your risk. Then all you need to really protect is your "password management" file.

 

-Dubious-

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