1. Skyrim Fantasy Soundtrack Overhaul List

Here's my raw mod loadout, as of the date of this post. I've only got 93 mods, including standard plugins and patches, so I'm still nowhere near the true modding elite, but I like what I've put together. There are only a few regrettable omissions, which I'll mention later in the post. Also, after the raw list, I break out some highlights and groupings that might be interesting.GOALS: Beautify Skyrim and make it look and sound like a new game. Play a male Nord bounty hunter with a 'Witcher' inspired look. Need lots of bandit leaders to go hunt down and kill and more radiant quests to make it worth killing them.

Skyrim Fantasy Soundtrack OverhaulSkyrim

Fantasy Soundtrack Project. Do you want to know what goes well with this mod? How about a nice music mod? Introducing the Fantasy Soundtrack Project. This mod adds a ton of great music to Skyrim. Skyrim’s original soundtrack is perfect, but I’ve played the game so many times that I wanted something different this time around. Skyrim Dark Fantasy Edition is a landscape and flora overhaul for skyrim which aims to create a more dark and realistic atmosphere.While I think skyrim is already a dark fantasy game, after nearly 3 years the look of skyrim get really old. A soundtrack, musical overhaul by aceeqmodding that I'd highly recommend for all of you Skyrim owners. 'Fantasy Soundtrack Project' provides 700+ minutes (10+ hours) of new music for TESV: Skyirm. 195+ orchestral and instrumental fantasy/epic music tracks for exploring, towns, taverns and castles.

Maybe do a little prize-fighting/gladiating on the side. A sub-goal is to play as a traditional adventuring foursome (tank, healer and two damage dealers), so the challenges need to be scaled up to match a party of four.NON-GOALS: Immersion, ala Frostfall. I'm not interested in hardcore survivalism or RP. I just want to hack and slash for fun and profit.NOTE: I follow a conservative mod management strategy. Once I start a playthrough, I don't add or update any mods and I don't change the load order, unless I find a blocking bug that requires a change. I include Immersive Armors because bandits looks totally bad-ass with all this variety. It makes some of them tougher, too.Beautify AudioFantasy Soundtrack Project (best music overhaul ever)Sounds of Skyrim (essential complement to Inconsequential NPCs - a inn full of patrons needs to be noisy!)Player Voicesets (I had a lot of fun setting this up - the Dragonborn says the best/funniest quotes from all of the male characters in Skyrim and really adds some depth to hear the Dragonborn speak, particularly during combat)Better Combat.

Inconsequential NPCsSkyTEST Realistic Animals & PredatorsAutomatic Variants (gotta love those colorful mud crabs!)Sands of Time (see below)Organized Bandits in Skyrim (see below)SoT and OBIS require their own blog posts to do them justice. While they definitely contribute to more people, more enemies and more variety, that's just scratching the surface. If you want a completely different and far more challenging experience with enemy encounters, you've got to use this pair of mods.More FollowersCerwiden (healer)Hoth (fellow bounty hunter that also provides radiant quests!)I also installed Vilja, but changed my mind and decided not to use her once I had Ceri.

Also, see Regrettable Omissions below.More QuestsHelgen Reborn (surprisingly good DLC-scale mod, huge dungeon in the middle of the quest line)SalemQUEST - more Companion radiant questsBetter HousingRiverwood Hunting Cabin (good starter house, easy to unlock)Thornrock (great no-frills house, but complete with all crafting stations, finding the key requires a bit of a hike, though)Convenient HorsesLast but not least, Convenient Horses is in a class by itself and would also need a separate post to cover its many wonders. I switched from fast-travelling everywhere to riding everywhere! Just install it, trust me.Regrettable OmissionsIn hindsight, I wish I had installed one of the mods that makes NPCs essential or flee for their lives during dragon and vampire attacks. I spend a lot of time running around seeing which villager or inn keeper got him or herself killed and using the console to resurrect them.

I mean, Adrian Avenicci got herself killed by a vampire on my first night in Whiterun, for Pete's sake!I wish I had installed Inigo rather than Vilja as a follower option. Although Arissa looks interesting.You may be wondering why ASIS isn't in my loadout. I wish that it was and I even tried to add it, but I couldn't get it to work without crashing. I really liked the customized enemy AI and even with out-of-the-box AI, my playtests showed that a fort full of bandits (thanks to PFTP) was extremely difficult to take on alone, even as a Legendary spellsword. No matter what I tried, though, it just wouldn't play nice with the rest of my mods, so I had to cut it. I needed something to fill my free time while waiting for WatchDogs to be released. I started playing Thief 2014, but got so bored with the repetitive missions that I stopped at chapter 6.

Boredom has been a big problem for me with games, lately. Gorgeous rendering and A-list voice acting can't making up for the complete lack of novelty and variety.Lacking any better ideas, I watched a Let's Play video of Skyrim after it had been heavily modded with new survival and immersion mods that I had never heard of: Frostfall? Skyrim Redone? Realistic Needs and Diseases? While the particular LP I watched wasn't all that interesting to me-a whole hour of real time spent hunting for food and finding clean water to drink isn't my cup of tea-it did clue me into the new generation of mods available for Skyrim.

Some of them looked really interesting.But could I stand to go back to Skyrim? After my fourth playthrough I had seen everything, done everything, all DLCs, all quests, all silliness, like blasting baskets of apples with Fus Roh Dah off the pinnacle of the Throat of the World. Could there really be anything interesting left to do in the land of the Nords?

Overhaul

Is nothing short of legendary. Skyrim, as its often called, sold more than 23 million copies since its release, and, with the remastered Skyrim: Special Edition that launched in October, sales are likely to continue climbing.The title’s long lifespan can be attributed largely to one thing: its massive modding community. From simple modifications that upgrade graphics and textures to extravagant additions that transform Tamriel into a nightmarish version of the Mushroom Kingdom, there’s an enormous number of mods that have preserved and expanded the Skyrim experience.

Skyrim Fantasy Soundtrack Overhaul List

Though many of the game’s most popular mods have yet to receive updates for Skyrim: Special Edition — or aren’t going to at all –there are still plenty of mods that have received overhauls and bug fixes since the game’s release. Read on to find out which mods are our favorites.Author’s Note: Please keep in mind that not all mods are available for all platforms. The PlayStation 4 version of Skyrim: Special Edition, in particular, has an extremely limited selection, since it lacks the ability to import external assets or mods larger than 1GB. Though both consoles boast a sizable mod pool, there are far more mods available for PC gamers. Many of these mods (especially the graphics mods) can also have a significant effect on your game performance. Visual enhancementsThese mods, which are all available for Skyrim: Special Edition, are built to make the world of Skyrim even more beautiful. Though the remastered edition included several upgrades to Bethesda’s Creation Engine — including improvements to snow and water shaders — the modding community will stop at nothing to make Tamriel’s northernmost province a photorealistic paradise, even if they have to sacrifice frame rates along the way.

Total Character MakeoverSkyrim is full of beautiful vistas, lush forests, and eerie swamps that draw you in and make you feel like you’re really in the world of the Elder Scrolls. Unfortunately, the game’s character models do not look quite as stunning. In particular, many characters’ faces just look terrible and unrealistic (we’re looking at you, Hilde). Luckily, “Total Character Makeover” fixes all that! The mod improves textures and skin meshes for NPCs and playable characters, so people look more like people and everyone’s bone structure isn’t so messed up.Skyrim Flora OverhaulThe trees and bushes in Skyrim look great from afar, but if you step too close and you’ll notice that the textures lack precise detail. Enter “Skyrim Flora Overhaul,” which replaces most of the game’s trees, grasses, and plants with original models, including 16 new trees and more than 180 new textures for plants and ground cover.Vivid Weathers SEIt’s tough to feel “in the moment” when a storm front rolls through Winterhold, but it consists of 10 droplets of water and a few measly snowflakes. “Vivid Weathers” corrects the issue by adding a ton of new weather effects, complete with both visual and aural cues to let you know when a fierce thunderstorm or a blanket of fog is headed your way.

This mod also replaces the default snow texture, and new cloud textures make for some truly spectacular sunsets. Keep in mind, though; it may not work well with other weather mods.Surreal LightingWhere most graphics-targeted mods zig, “Surreal Lighting” zags. Instead of enhancing textures or reshading drops of water, this mod aims to make Skyrim feel like more of a fantasy world than some sort of ancient version of Canada.

15361024 component protection. The mod simply alters brightness, contrast, and color in outdoor settings, resulting in gorgeous skyboxes filled with shades of pink and blue. “Surreal Lighting” isn’t a dramatic add-on, but it helps bring a little color to Tamriel’s often-dreary landscapes.