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Taleden's Lifelike ENB for RLO+CoT
version 1.0 (2013-11-27)


WHAT IS AN ENB PRESET?

The short version is, it makes the game look better. The most obvious changes
are in the intensity and color of various kinds of lights and visual effects,
but there are a lot of nice improvements that are subtler too, like better
shadows, ambient occlusion, better skin tones, and so on. See www.enbdev.com
for more information.


WHY DID YOU MAKE YET ANOTHER ENB PRESET?

A lot of ENB presets seem intended specifically for machinima, or taking pretty
screenshots, or something. Even among the ones that say they're meant for
regular play, I never found one that made the world look quite the way I
thought it should. That's not to say they don't look lovely in their own ways,
it's just that they all had one characteristic or another that made me think
"that doesn't look right" to an extent that it was distracting from the game
experience.


WHAT'S DIFFERENT ABOUT THIS ENB PRESET?

Taleden's Lifelike ENB (for RLO+CoT (hey that rhymes!)) is meant for actually
playing Skyrim, while still making it as beautiful, immersive and lifelike as
possible. Above all, I tried to adjust or eliminate any lighting or visual
effects which remind you that you're playing a game and not looking at a real
place. But here are some more specific features and visual principles that went
into the design of this preset.

The Sun is Bright

Like, really bright. This manifests in a few different ways; surfaces lit by
direct sunlight are much brighter, of course, but even shadows are not very
dark on bright sunny days, because all that light bouncing around makes for
fairly high ambient light.

Also, if you try using a flashlight or even car headlights on a sunny day,
you'll notice that the sun is MUCH brighter than any artificial light source,
even with modern bulbs and reflectors. Torches and firepits cast so little
light compared to the sun that their effect is barely visible at all next to
direct sunlight. This is probably the single most noticeable change that makes
the world look (to me) much more realistic and lifelike on bright sunny days.

The Night is Dark

Most importantly, there are no shadows at night. This was one of my biggest
peeves in vanilla Skyrim which is not fixed by many ENB presets I've seen; why
would there be shadows at night? What's casting them? The moons aren't that
bright, and even if they were, Skyrim's nighttime shadows are not at the right
angle to be cast by the moons. So they seem to be cast by nothing, which looks
awful (to me).

No Sun in Oblivion

The Soul Cairn and Apocrypha both originally have day-night cycles, complete
with shadows that change direction as if the sun were rising and setting. But
these are alternate planes of reality where there should be no sun at all, so
now they are timeless and shadowless as (I think) they ought to be.

No Eye Adaptation

This is the effect that makes the whole screen get darker when you look at a
bright light, and brighter when you look at a dark corner. It sounds nice in
theory and of course it's inspired by how our eyes really work, but I've never
seen it executed in Skyrim in a way which wasn't distracting and weird. So I
just turned it off entirely, and instead tuned all of the light levels to work
out without needing this "adaptive" adjustment.

No Bloom

This also seemed nice in theory but always just looked blurry to me. Maybe
somebody out there has a great bloom shader which gives really bright things
that nice glow without also softening and blurring the entire screen, but all
my attempts with bloom just looked like a greased camera lens. So I turned it
off entirely.

No Depth Of Field or Lens Flare

When I play Skyrim I like to pretend that I am a character in the world. I do
not like to pretend that I am a video camera, so it makes no sense to me to see
visual artifacts that are specific to how mechanical video cameras work. These
effects are great for machinima so it feels like you took a camera into Skyrim
and filmed something, but if you want the screen to look like what your own
eyes would see, these effects are weird and distracting. So I turned them off.

Note that there are some weathers which apply a blur to everything in the
distance. This isn't the same as Depth of Field because it doesn't try to
guess where you're focusing your eyes, it's just a distance blur (such as
during heavy rain), so these are still enabled.

Night Eye Works

Many other ENBs seem to make things super dark and also prevent Night Eye from
working, which is awkward for actual gameplay. The conventional workaround was
all-or-nothing; either you had to enable all vanilla post-processing (most of
which looks bad when mixed with ENB), or you had to do without Night Eye. My
workaround does require an extra plugin file, but it makes Night Eye work
without also screwing up the color balance in general.


KNOWN BUGS

No Sky Lighting or Particle Lights

I like how both of these effects look, unfortunately they both have bugs which
Boris has not yet been interested or able to fix. Sky Lighting exhibits a very
distracting flicker when turning the camera near a shadow, and Particle Lights
cause some dynamic particles (such as the snow on some mountain rock surfaces)
to be visible through otherwise solid embers. Both of these issues were
reported, so if they're ever fixed, I'll happily turn them back on and fine-
tune the levels.

Flickering Reflections in Exterior Water During Cloudy Weather

This seems to be caused by a particular combination of Sky and Water settings,
and only during fully overcast weathers, but Boris was not able to reproduce it
himself. So it's unknown whether this is a bug in ENB or caused by some video
driver or other factor.

Sourceless Highlights in Some Interiors, Dim Sunlight in Others

Some interior imagespaces misuse (in my opinion) the directional ambient light
parameters in a way that looks like there is some sourceless light shining from
below everything. I think this looks really bad, but unfortunately I can't turn
it off because otherwise, "fake" exteriors (i.e. interior caves or buildings
which have large openings to the "outside") often have no other light, so they
would then appear unnaturally dark even when it looks like broad daylight
through the opening. It's a tradeoff that I went back and forth on many times
but ultimately decided that the sourceless highlights looked less bad than the
missing sunlight.


INSTALLATION

1. Install Realistic Lighting Overhaul and Climates of Tamriel

This ENB preset is designed specifically around the lighting changes that are
already made by RLO and CoT. If you don't already use (or want to start using)
both of those mods, I suggest you find a different ENB preset, because this one
won't look right without them.

RLO: http://skyrim.nexusmods.com/mods/30450
Do NOT use Adaptive Interiors or RLO Weathers, they will conflict with CoT.

CoT: http://skyrim.nexusmods.com/mods/17802
I suggest nights level 3. Also get the DLC patches if needed.

2. Install Boris Vorontsov's ENBSeries for Skyrim (version 0.226 or later)

It is not allowed to include it in this package, so you must download it for
yourself from http://enbdev.com/download_mod_tesskyrim.htm . The only files you
need to extract are "d3d9.dll" and "enbhost.exe", and you must put them in
your Skyrim game folder alongside "SkyrimLauncher.exe" and "TESV.exe". Do NOT
put them inside your Data folder with your mods; ENB is not a mod.

I have tested this preset with ENBSeries versions 0.226 through 0.236, which is
the latest at the time of writing. Versions before 0.226 don't support the
ENB Helper (below), so they'll look wrong in certain situations. Versions after
0.236 will hopefully work fine, but it depends what Boris changes in ENBSeries.

3. Install Alexander Blade's ENB Helper (version 1.1 or later)

It is also not allowed to include it in this package, so you must download it
for yourself from http://www.dev-c.com/skyrim/enbhelper/ . The only file you
need to extract is "enbhelper.dll", put it alongside "d3d9.dll" in your Skyrim
game folder.

This is technically optional, but if you don't install it then sunrise and
sunset lighting won't be synchronized with what the sun is actually doing at
that time of day, and you may see other lighting which is wrong for the time of
day (like glowing windows inside at night when it's dark out).

4. Turn off Antialiasing, Anisotropic Filtering and FXAA in the Skyrim Launcher

ENB will handle these for you, so you have to turn off Skyrim's version of
both effects. If you don't, everything will look wrong and your framerate will
be terrible.

Antialiasing and Anisotropic Filtering are on the main options screen in the
launcher; FXAA is a checkbox in the Advanced options.

5. Edit your SkyrimPrefs.ini

These are the same changes that are required for all ENB presets. If you change
anything else in this file, things might not look right; if you have any
trouble, the first you should do is delete your Skyrim.ini and SkyrimPrefs.ini,
re-do step #4 (above), and then make ONLY these changes.

Add or edit these lines in the [Display] section:
bFloatPointRenderTarget=1
bTreesReceiveShadows=1
bDrawLandShadows=1
bShadowsOnGrass=1

Add or edit this line in the [Imagespace] section:
bDoDepthOfField=1

6. Extract everything from this package into your Skyrim game folder

There is only one file that should go in your Data folder with other mods, and
that is "ENBNightVision.esp". Everything else should go in your Skyrim game
folder.

You may want to edit "enblocal.ini" to set "VideoMemorySizeMb" to whatever is
appropriate for your hardware. I use 8192 myself because I have 8GB system RAM
plus 4GB video RAM; if you have less, 4096 may be safer.

7. Enable "ENBNightVision.esp" in your load order

The only thing this plugin does is alter the Night Eye effect in such a way
that the ENB shader code can detect it and apply a similar "see in the dark"
lighting effect. If you don't install and enable this plugin, then Night Eye
will do nothing while this ENB is active (except blur your screen). But if you
don't plan to play a Khajiit, werewolf, vampire or anything else that grants
Night Eye or a similar ability, then this isn't necessary.

If you uninstall this ENB, make sure to also remove "ENBNightVision.esp" from
your load order! Otherwise Night Eye will turn your screen completely black.
It should be safe to add or remove the plugin at any time, since it contains no
scripts or other save-sensitive changes; the only form it modifies is the
NightEyeImod imagespace modifier.

8. Turn your in-game brightness all the way down

The way Skyrim applies brightness tends to make all colors look a little washed
out, so I prefer to keep the in-game slider all the way down (to the left). All
light levels in this ENB preset have been tuned with that in mind.


UNINSTALLATION

1. Delete or rename "d3d9.dll" in your Skyrim game folder

2. Delete or disable "ENBNightVision.esp" from your load order

3. Delete all the other files you installed along with this ENB (Optional)

You don't technically have to delete them, since they'll be ignored anyway as
long as "d3d9.dll" is removed or renamed. But if you want to tidy up, delete
(or move to another folder, just in case you make a mistake) everything whose
name starts with "enb", plus "injector.ini", "SMAA.fx" and "SMAA.h".


OTHER SUGGESTED MODS

mindflux's texture and mesh fixes for ENB
http://enbseries.enbdev.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=1499
There are two, make sure to install both the "PARTICLE PATCH ALL-IN-ONE" and
the "SUBSURFACE SCATTERING PATCH".

Climates of Tamriel - Weather Patch - Fog Rain Overcast
http://skyrim.nexusmods.com/mods/39799

Texture Pack Combiner
http://skyrim.nexusmods.com/mods/20801
http://code.google.com/p/skyrim-tpc/
Includes SMIM, WATER, and thousands of hand-picked textures from dozens of
various texture packs. It takes awhile to get everything downloaded and built,
but the result looks fantastic.

Project Parallax Remastered
http://skyrim.nexusmods.com/mods/40512
If you're also using the Texture Pack Combiner (above), make sure to get the
correct version of Project Parallax Remastered, down in the Optional Files
section ("PPR TPC 1-3").

Lanterns of Skyrim
http://skyrim.nexusmods.com/mods/18916
Nights are a bit darker with CoT and this ENB, so it's nice to have lanterns
along the roads.


CREDITS

Bethesda Softworks for Skyrim
Boris Vorontsov for ENBSeries
Alexander Blade for ENBHelper
Andrej Dudenhefner for injectSMAA
Jorge Jimenez, Jose I. Echevarria, Tiago Sousa, Diego Gutierrez for SMAA