I really like the look of this, that sky reminds me of old cowboy movies my dad would watch. I don't think I'll be using it right now but if I ever do a run as Buster Scruggs I'll be back.
Uh, about those screenshots. You know you can turn anti-aliasing on now if you stopped using ENB right? The game's actual MSAA is infinitely better than injected FXAA/SMAA which can't properly access the depth buffer, and it works just great as long as ENB isn't breaking it. You should seriously consider it to avoid nasty jaggies like these (all taken from the "ON" screenshots):
Just run the Fallout Launcher through MO2, click Options and set Antialiasing to 4 or 8 samples.
Hey just to add to this... By default the in game AA can have weird transparency issues (i.e. certain hair / facial hair styles get transparent in thin sections). Especially noticeable with Transparency Multisampling enabled, and AA set too high. No idea if MO2 fixes this olde bug, I don't use MO2, but if it doesn't I'll share how I fixed it.
Personally I was able to get around this by setting the in game Antialiasing to 2X with New Vegas Configurator (EDIT: Dealer's Choice on how YOU change the AA settings, I just recommend 2X since it works for me lol). Then with Nvidia Profile Inspector, pull up the Fallout New Vegas profile. The Antialiasing section is all you need adjust. Be sure to click the "Apply Changes" button in the top right if you try this out. Just click the drop menu for each setting, and try my values.
Not trying to be argumentative with the above poster, but I would strongly advise against using tools like New Vegas Configator [sic] or BethINI. They have a very strong track record of breaking games with changes that tend to be placebo at best and dangerous at worst. You can already set Antialiasing to 2x in the normal game launcher, so I'm not really sure why it was mentioned at all. The NVIDIA advice might be relevant though, try that if you like.
But yeah I would strongly caution against using any tools from 2012. MO2 of course does not do anything related to the above post because it is a mod manager, but you should use that too.
Not trying to be argumentative either XD. Hopefully I didn't/don't come across as such. That was only listed since that's what I used, and I was just posting what I did. Guess I'm just an old fart stuck in his ways for using New Vegas Configator lol, but to quote God Howard "It Just Works."
You could use FalloutNVLauncher.exe, or whatever it is MO2 uses instead. Or you could just modify the ini files in your documents. Look for iMultiSample= (AA) , and iMaxAnisotropy= (AF). Do what feels right. :D I just recommend 2X AA if anyone were to go the Nvidia Inspector route.
I don't know any alternatives for Nvidia Profile Inspector though. Also no clue if Nvidia Profile Inspector works - or if there is a comparable alternative for AMD Radeon. Sorry.
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Just run the Fallout Launcher through MO2, click Options and set Antialiasing to 4 or 8 samples.
Personally I was able to get around this by setting the in game Antialiasing to 2X with New Vegas Configurator (EDIT: Dealer's Choice on how YOU change the AA settings, I just recommend 2X since it works for me lol). Then with Nvidia Profile Inspector, pull up the Fallout New Vegas profile. The Antialiasing section is all you need adjust. Be sure to click the "Apply Changes" button in the top right if you try this out. Just click the drop menu for each setting, and try my values.
Antialiasing - Behavior Flags : 0x00080000 AA_BEHAVIOR_FLAGS_SKIP_RT_DIM_CHECK_FOR_ENHANCE
Antialiasing - Mode : Enhance the Application Setting
Antialiasing - Setting : 0x00000006 AA_MODE_METHOD_SUPERSAMPLE_4X_BIAS
Antialiasing - Transparency Multisampling : Enabled
But yeah I would strongly caution against using any tools from 2012. MO2 of course does not do anything related to the above post because it is a mod manager, but you should use that too.
You could use FalloutNVLauncher.exe, or whatever it is MO2 uses instead. Or you could just modify the ini files in your documents. Look for iMultiSample= (AA) , and iMaxAnisotropy= (AF). Do what feels right. :D I just recommend 2X AA if anyone were to go the Nvidia Inspector route.
I don't know any alternatives for Nvidia Profile Inspector though. Also no clue if Nvidia Profile Inspector works - or if there is a comparable alternative for AMD Radeon. Sorry.