I added this mod and promptly forgot that I did so when I stumbled on it awhile later it was a total surprise. It fit in perfectly with its surroundings, nicely decorated as well and the decorations told a story. Interior was the same, all very well in keeping with an isolated shack for some hermit. It was wonderful to have a place to rest out in the bogs. nicely done
Hello there, as part of my take on feedback issues I have stated that I will be helping fellow new modders by reviewing their content: http://www.nexusmods.com/morrowind/images/2670/?
I am testing your mod now
As I installed it, I put it through TES3CMD which is a cleaning software tool for mods.
"Cleaning" is the process of removing dirty references from your mod. " Dirty references" are unintentional changes you made through your mod, and these can be created through lots of things such as: clicking on an object, loading a cell, copy and pasting an object, looking at an NPC's stats and items, and so on. It is important to clean your mod because dirty references can corrupt saves and make unnecessary incompatibilities with other mods. Your mod is dirty. It is ok to have made these mistakes, everyone does them, and it is easily fixed.
When you clean a mod through TES3CMD it shows the cleaning output and stats, here are your stats:
I recommend that you use TES3CMD for automated cleaning: https://sourceforge.net/projects/mlox/files/tes3cmd/ and then use Enchanted Editor to manually remove dirty references that weren't detected by tes3cmd: http://mw.modhistory.com/download--1662
You have to be careful with Enchanted Editor because it allows you to delete every single change your mod made to Vanilla Morrowind, so you have to make sure that what you're deleting has nothing to do with what your mod does.
Make sure you back up your mod before cleaning, as sometimes bad stuff happens.
I will be putting the actual feedback as a reply to this comment, feel free to PM me any questions or go on the Bethesda Forums and ask your questions there.
This is a very nice mod, I enjoyed trying it. It is easily summed up with pictures, I posted them in the Users tab on the Images page of the mod, but the Renovated version is a great improvement, and has great design and detail all while keeping the shack's backstory (home of a poet and lute player) The only thing I recommend you to do is place some sacks under the hammock, and of course clean the mod.
Endorsed, looking forward to seeing new content from you.
7 comments
I am testing your mod now
As I installed it, I put it through TES3CMD which is a cleaning software tool for mods.
"Cleaning" is the process of removing dirty references from your mod. " Dirty references" are unintentional changes you made through your mod, and these can be created through lots of things such as: clicking on an object, loading a cell, copy and pasting an object, looking at an NPC's stats and items, and so on. It is important to clean your mod because dirty references can corrupt saves and make unnecessary incompatibilities with other mods. Your mod is dirty. It is ok to have made these mistakes, everyone does them, and it is easily fixed.
When you clean a mod through TES3CMD it shows the cleaning output and stats, here are your stats:
duplicate object instance: 1
junk_CELL: 19
redundant CELL.AMBI: 1
redundant CELL.WHGT: 1
I recommend that you use TES3CMD for automated cleaning: https://sourceforge.net/projects/mlox/files/tes3cmd/
and then use Enchanted Editor to manually remove dirty references that weren't detected by tes3cmd: http://mw.modhistory.com/download--1662
You have to be careful with Enchanted Editor because it allows you to delete every single change your mod made to Vanilla Morrowind, so you have to make sure that what you're deleting has nothing to do with what your mod does.
Make sure you back up your mod before cleaning, as sometimes bad stuff happens.
I will be putting the actual feedback as a reply to this comment, feel free to PM me any questions or go on the Bethesda Forums and ask your questions there.
Endorsed, looking forward to seeing new content from you.