This slowly (very slowly) removes scripts and other things from uninstalled mods or other sources. ![]() ![]() ![]() Now, what happens if you have a bad mod order (say you did it manually or used BOSS) with no dirty mods and a perfectly green Wrye Bash? Well, in my game.my save went from 14mb to 15mb (that is pretty normal in a heavy mod list.you do not want a 50+ mb save).įor example, a real life friend save was 294 mb (no idea how he was able to play at 40 fps with little crashes.) and he went into an interior (go to a house or small store or other interior with less npcs) and left the game running for 12 or so hours and it dropped to 9 mb. It would jump after 5-10 minutes to 50 mb (I managed to save it at that point) and it crashed the game. Then I closed console (press ~ again), and waited inside a store for 31 days (with the mod it makes waiting a lot easier.no need to keep pressing wait 30+ times) I used LOOT to fix the mod order, and did the following save cleaning. I then stood in a corner (naughty corner, I was on timeout) for 9-10 hours and my save went from 50 mb back to 14mb. Once you let the game run for 5+ hours in your naughty corner, you'll want to save and exit Skyrim. The next thing to do is get this save cleaner:Īnd open your most recent save you just cleaned with that tool. There are basic usage instructions within the tool. But, you'll only need to use remove unattached references and remove instances. ![]() Sometimes doing the above is all that is needed and there is nothing to clean.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |