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posted by Dopefish on Thursday February 20 2014, @01:30PM   Printer-friendly
from the stop-shipping-beta-quality-code dept.

combatserver writes:

"The folks over at Dark Side of Gaming are reporting an interesting development in the game modding community--a recently released modification for the blockbuster game from Bethesda, The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim (PC version). A long-running issue with the game since release has been recurring CTDs (crashes to desktop) and infinite loading screens that often bring the game to a grinding halt after just a few minutes of play, especially when heavily modded. Bethesda has tried to resolve the issue with several patches, to no avail.

Sheson, a member of the Skyrim modding community, fixed Skyrim. According to many user reports--thousands, in fact--Sheson's relatively minor adjustment to memory allocation has solved the vast majority of stability issues. The improvements have increased game performance far beyond what anyone had expected. Players are now merging mods to get around the hard-coded cap of 256 mods that Skyrim can load at any given time, effectively packing more content into the game. The fix also allows for Skyrim to run on lower-end PCs, widening the market for a game that has already sold over 20 million copies.

Since Sheson's patch released, the fix has been repackaged by other community members as a mod for Skyrim to make it even more accessible. Skyrim players who use the script-extender SKSE will be pleased to hear that the patch will be included in the next build."

[ED Note: Bottom line -- Bethesda shouldn't be packaging poorly written and untested code for sale, then requiring gamers to pay to play as beta testers. Kudos to Sheson for his hard work and effort.]

 
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  • (Score: 2, Informative) by darinbob on Friday February 21 2014, @03:05AM

    by darinbob (2593) on Friday February 21 2014, @03:05AM (#4027)

    Well the characters for sure will never look better than Skyrim. But the landscape can be. It helps that Morrowind has a lot of barren areas and ash deserts. So just some retexturing helps a lot, and in areas by the ocean they can plop down more plants.

    However it's not necessary. You really can play it without the mods and enjoy it, and get past the graphics pretty quickly. Though mods to improve the UI so that more fits on the screen, add the unofficial patches, and so forth, will be handy. It's much more of a sandbox than Skryim is, there's a lot of land area than is covered by all the quests, etc. It has its own unique feel; Oblivion was too much like generic fantasy, Skyrim was too much like generic nordic fantasy with dragons, but Morrowind has a very alien feel and unusual creatures. (though these unusual creates are now commonplace in ESO, with guar down in southern Tamriel, bah humbug)

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