Best mods to download from skyrim se mods






















This mod adjusts all races, acting as a blanket improvement for the game in general. Body mods really show how crazy Skyrim modding can get. Modders have literally gone down to the pores just to make high-quality mods.

Choosing the mods to go on this list was a real challenge just from the sheer volume of them. Join the Gaming Metaverse Writing Contest. Get feral when you answer to the greatest interview in history Share your philosophy. Instagram vs. Snapchat: The People's Choice by juxtathinka. Were you a vampire, a soldier, or maybe just a simple crewmate aboard a capsized boat? The mysterious sculpture that dictates your path in Alternate Start. Forget your shiny swords and big battleaxes.

Chairs and mead are the weapons of the new Skyrim. The Weaponize Everything mod adds a little bit of common sense to Tamriel, turning everyday combat into a glorified wrestling match. Get caught stealing? Save your sword from incriminating bloodshed and use the chair they got up out of to smack them back down.

You can even repair and reinforce breakable objects so you can turn your favorite everyday household item into your new main killing machine. Between Rust, Ark, and Valhiem, it feels as if the next big survival game is always just around the corner. Thirst, fatigue, and harsh climates become just as treacherous as the wolves and trolls patrolling the region.

You can purchase the Survival mode independently, but the bundle tosses in the ability to camp out in the wilderness and a deeply customizable backpack no adventurer should be without.

Whether you decide to play on Survival mode or not, the Plague of the Dead mod adds a new element of terror to those chilly nights under the stars. As the sun sets, the vengeful horrors typically found defending caves and crypts against bandits litter the sprawling hills and fields of Skyrim.

The towns are spared from the shambling undead, creating a reason to actually spend a night in that house you saved up for. The Gamestonks movement lives on in Skyrim! Stock prices are affected by your in-game actions, too. Play detective and solve a murder mystery while exploring a massive, ancient city. It's got excellent, award-winning writing, a non-linear story, fantastic voice acting by a large cast, an enjoyable original soundtrack, and even a touch of time travel.

Here's our write-up of the Forgotten City Skyrim mod. It's also been adapted into a standalone game set in ancient Rome. Adds a gallery you can fill with unique items, a museum to your achievements that is also a library, a storage facility, a questline of its own, and a place to learn archaeology complete with its own perks.

While there is a version of Legacy of the Dragonborn for Oldrim, the v5 update specifically for Special Edition remaps the building to make it larger and more like a real museum. This total conversion creates an entirely new world, very nearly the size of Skyrim itself, and populates it with new dungeons, quests, monsters, and fully voiced NPCs. You can read about the opening hours of Enderal here. Vigilant is a four-part quest mod that adds some Dark Souls flair to Tamriel. After getting stuck in Oblivion, you'll face off against otherworldly monsters and big, Souls-style bosses while exploring areas filled with special items and keys.

Beyond that, the 'Anvil of Zenithar' allows players to craft their own wares after finishing objectives, besting bosses and reaching new areas. Vigilant Voiced adds voice-acting. You can also snag the same modder's Bloodborne-themed adventure called Glenmoril.

Moonpath to Elsweyr was one of the first quest mods for Oldrim back in the day. It's made its way to SSE now with its two new regions and custom quests. In Jody's Moonpath spotlight he talks to its original creator. Who's going to rebuild Helgen after it got toasted by a dragon at the beginning of the game? You are, of course. It's a huge, fully voiced quest mod where you'll restore the town, choose a faction, and fight in the new arena. Another big mod from Arthmoor restores loads of content that exists in SSE's data files but wasn't implemented in the game.

Numerous locations, NPCs, dialogue, quests, and items have been brought back into the light, and Skyrim is richer for it. This big construction overhaul mod redesigns all of Skyrim's major cities and some settlements as well.

Every city has been reimagined to more distinctly fit its own theme with new buildings and vendors. It doubles as an immersion mod as well, with local banners and guards changing allegiance as Skyrim's civil war develops. There are player home mods to suit all tastes, but the Asteria is a particularly nice one—a flying ship with all mod cons, by which I mean storage space and crafting tables.

It's permanently docked, however, and can't be moved around, though it does have a teleporter for a more immersive alternative to fast-travel. If you want a flyable skyship, try the Dev Aveza. Even with Skyrim Special Edition, there's still plenty of room to make Tamriel prettier. Modders have updated how characters look and added higher resolution textures, among other things, to put a new shine on the game. Climates of Tamriel is a huge overhaul adding new weather types, new lighting, and clouds.

It can make night-time darker as well for a more immersive adventuring experience. There's even a winter version that covers even more of Skyrim in snow.

Realistic Water Two, drawing and expanding on the work of some earlier water mods, adds better ripples, larger splashes, re-textured foam and faster water flow in streams, bobbing chunks of ice, and even murky, stagnant-looking water in dungeons. For all your extremely realistic screenshot-taking needs.

Skyrim's NPCs already looked dated when the game was first released, and they certainly haven't aged well. The SSE might improve the looks of the world, but it doesn't touch its citizens, so this mod from Scaria should be on your list. It gives everyone in the game including your avatar a facelift with more detailed textures that won't kneecap your framerate, without making characters look out of place.

We can all agree Bethesda's RPGs aren't often stunners in the hair department. So many hair mods get carried away turning characters into models, though. Vanilla Hair Replacer aims for more lore-friendly changes for Skyrim's default hair choices so NPCs look a less scraggly but still like they hail from Skyrim. Be sure to check the "recommended mods" section of the page to get your characters looking exactly like the ones in the screenshots.

While Skyrim Special Edition adds plenty of enhanced visuals, it doesn't do a thing to improve the original game's low-poly meshes. This mod edits hundreds of 3D models placed in thousands of different locations for items like furniture, clutter, architectural elements, and landscape objects to make them look nicer and more realistic. Hear me out. Aside from NPC's faces, what are you going to have your nose up against in Skyrim most often?

Well yeah, enemies, but also doors! Modder "Hype1" has created lots of new door meshes with glorious 4k textures so you'll never be stuck picking the lock on a low-res door again. While you're at it, Book Covers is a mod that will make books as beautiful as they deserve to be. If you use a lot of serious lighting mods, like ENB and Realistic Lighting, then this mod can save you several frames per second. Realistic Humanoid Movement Speed. Sick of walking like a turtle and sprinting like a cheetah?

This mod fixes the problem. Your movement speed is adjusted to more reasonable levels, from a brisk walk that lets you keep up with NPCs, to slower run speeds that make it challenging to escape from that cranky troll. This is a small mod, but it makes the game much less frustrating. Performance Textures. This mod rezises and enhances the textures for armor, clothes, and weapons, making them both better looking while simultaneously making the file sizes smaller for improved performance.

This is useful for users with low-end machines who still want to improve their graphics. The modder has done the same for animals and creatures. Performance Plus. Performance Plus decreases the fidelity of particles, which provides an FPS boost.

In most cases, such as snow, it's barely noticeable, and the slight degrading of particle textures is more than made up for by an increase in performance. The Choice is Yours. Lets the player be way more in charge of what quests they want. Stops random auto-quest greetings from NPCs, stops books from giving auto-quests, and lets the player customize when they want to see certain quests become available.

Full MCM support. Optimal experience paired with Timing Is Everything. Skyrim's map is functional but boring. A Quality World Map offers multiple ways to fix it. You can replace the map with a much more detailed world texture, with colors that help delineate the separate areas much more obviously, but there's also an option to have a paper map with a more Oblivion look if that's your thing.

Skyrim's original UI is, well, terrible. SkyUI makes it easier to use, more pleasant to read, and much more useful for sorting through your loot and menus. Most importantly, SkyUI adds a mod configuration menu to the pause screen, letting you tweak and adjust compatible mods including many on this list. A lot of mods don't require SkyUI and will run just fine without it, but you'll get much more out of your mods if you have it.

Using a keyboard and mouse for Skyrim means sometimes the game gets confused when you're selecting a dialogue option. You've noticed, surely, that sometimes when you choose a response the game thinks you've chosen a different one.

Skyrim's dialogue controls are weird and clunky, and this mod completely and thankfully fixes that. The same modder also created one for message boxes.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000