• he/him

Chicago Game Developer

Project lead, programmer, & composer at @CantGetEnoughGames (http://cantgetenoughgames.com)

Other socials: https://twitter.com/thom_cotay | https://mas.to/@thomcote


JuniperTheory
@JuniperTheory
  1. Add a few quality of life mods to improve your experience, maybe also some interesting mods that change the game a bit
  2. Download some massive mods that change the game in interesting ways; maybe full conversions, really try to create the best possible experience
  3. Download 200 conflicting mods that are all extremely weird and goofy and none of them work together and your game breaks after 10 minutes and it's funner then shit

Xuelder
@Xuelder
  1. Minecraft Modding
  2. Doom Modding
  3. Skyrim(or most Bethesda games) Modding


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in reply to @JuniperTheory's post:

I'm usually in group 1 for Minecraft! I insist on adding performance mods that don't change gameplay but make it run way more efficiently, but I'll choose vanilla+ mods if I want a lightly modded experience. I haven't played a big heavily-modded pack in a long time, the last one I played a lot was Tekkit. :P

I'm still grumpy about how that one "skip the combat" mod for Dragon Age Origins broke shit because there were fights where the door wouldn't unlock until you defeated a second wave of enemies, which spawned on a timer and you could theoretically defeat the first wave too fast and be out of combat before the second wave spawned.