Nina28209 Posted September 29, 2018 Share Posted September 29, 2018 Hi all, just a quick question.So there is a mod called "2077 as it was" that fixes roads throughout the Commonwealth. Unfortunaly though i heard that it is a bit broken unfortunaly and breaks quests so i dont use it.I wanted to do sth similar to that for myself (repair all the streets around Commonwealth and get rid of the rubble and so on.If I dont delete any quest objects, doors etc, close all the holes again that may appear and clean my mod with fo4 a lot, undelete and disable references and Regenerate precombined meshes and previs data am i good to go?Thanks and have a nice day Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Shoneah0Tokala Posted October 19, 2018 Share Posted October 19, 2018 (edited) In theory I think it could work...If you are unsure of what you are doing then you may notice issue with the Navmesh (i believe that's what it's called) where the game engine will be stating that the floor is at 'x' height even though your roads are in fact at 'z' meaning the player and other npc's could end up marching into and through the roads rather than over them, or simply climbing over non-existent piles of rubble. I'm not certain on how this works in Fallout though, I was working on a worldspace mod for skyrim once and a problem I kept encountering was dropping through the floor.That being said I don't see any reason why you shouldn't give it a try; some of your terminology suggest to me you're at least somewhat experienced in CK, plus there are many modders out there that have accomplished similar feats, though on a smaller scale such as: Pre-Apocalyptic roads and sidewalks for sanctuary, or, Sanctuary - Reworked roads sending a pm to authors that have worked with the roads already and asking for advice would be an asset to you. Also, start small, test regularly and make frequent back ups of your mod. As I suspect a mod on this scale has the potential for errors in gameplay (much like the other you mentioned in the original post) and having a back up of before you caused the error could save you serious time in the long run.Good luck and I look forward to seeing what you accomplish :smile: Edited October 19, 2018 by Shoneah0Tokala Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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