ajb1978

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Everything posted by ajb1978

  1. ajb1978

    WeMod

    WeMod is basically a GUI front end for CheatEngine. (That's a gross simplification, but c'mon that's what it is.) So basically its focus is on altering or freezing memory addresses. Infinite this or that, zero reduction in this that or the other thing, enabling of specific dev functions like "fly mode". Like @Kranium said, and as its CheatEngine origins suggest, it is in fact primarily a bunch of cheats, although Fly Mode has legitimate uses for getting you unstuck due to terrain bugs.
  2. I don't want to nitpick, but in Forsaken Airfield, the main hangar is misspelled as "hanger". A hanger is something you use to store your coat. A hangar is something you use to store your plane.
  3. I just spent the night at the hangar and slept in the plane closest to the basement steps since I didn't fell like going all the way upstairs to the bed. I did not recover any condition while sleeping...
  4. Is there any way to avoid glimmer fog? Indoors, in a cave, underground, nothing seems to work. The only thing I haven't tried is that basement of the main hangar, which is impossible since the region is FAR too large to get there from anywhere else, unless you're already right there. Edit: Finally lucked out and was able to get back to the hangar. The basement does begin to steadily reduce Insomnia risk. While I wish there were more locations available, at least Insomnia isn't too bad of an affliction. I never actually got woken up in the middle of the night.
  5. Has anyone noticed that Stags yield more meat than Does? I just shot my first Stag of the run, and it had 12.1kg of meat!! I shot a Doe earlier and it had 8.1, which was fairly normal.
  6. Uninstalled the game, reinstalling to see if it bypasses the issue. Edit: Seems to have done the trick.
  7. I changed my mind, but I can't change my vote. I think it'll be more fun to start in the Far Territory, assuming that's an option. I can't pass up the opportunity.
  8. The embers in Fire Addons will allow embers to last a lot longer, if you don't let the fire get too hot. Basically the logic is, a hotter fire burns through fuel more completely, while a relatively cooler one won't. Resulting in embers that last a longer duration. While realistic I don't find it terribly useful in practice. I mean it's not THAT big a deal to just remember to add more fuel to a fire before it goes out. The Ember Box is actually part of the Fire Pack mod. It's a reusable but short-lived firestarter that decays 5% per hour, and can be repaired 50% with a charcoal. An ember box can actually contribute towards a more realistic style of play where you cook your food and boil your water as you need it, vs. leaving it outside in the snow and boiling up hundreds of liters of water in bottles that magically appear out of nowhere. I personally like the Ember Box, coupled with Realistic Water Management, to where you might literally not have a means of carrying water with you. In which case you boil up what you need when you need it, drink your fill, and dump the excess before heading out. Does it make the game "easier" being able to start fires essentially at will? Maybe. But I mean I have never once run out of matches, ever. On vanilla I just wait for sunny days, mag lens up my bear/moose and a 50 liters of water, so one might argue the Ember Box solves a problem that doesn't exist. But as a counterpoint, it can completely change the way you play the game, which makes it a surprisingly interesting item to have. And interesting gameplay is better than difficult gameplay IMO. Of course you can also craft a bow drill using the same mod, which decays only with use. To me, THAT makes the game too easy. The Ember Box you at least have to diligently maintain, as you can't even go a single day without repairing it or it'll go out.
  9. An upgradeable, portable campsite. Gets heavier the more amenities you add to it, but with the travois it becomes manageable. At its most basic it's a repairable reusable snow shelter. But then you can start adding things like a cook fire, which is just one burner, but is 100% windproof AND can be lit with a mag lens. Then maybe later build a portable workbench, which doubles the time required to craft items because of how cramped it is, but hey...it's a portable workbench. Don't mind me, I'm just spitballing. That's one of the best parts about this whole game/experience--it's fun to speculate on the "what ifs". Especially since on occasion, those "what ifs" become reality.
  10. Spoiler alert. Episode 4 is my favorite thus far. Not only does it start you off with nothing, you can be reset to nothing if you're not paying attention. This makes the crafting system SUPER valuable in this episode. Plus with how unforgiving the region is, all the survival lessons you've learned up to this point become vital. On the other hand you get a moosehide satchel, rifle, bow, revolver, flare pistol, noisemakers, and no survivors to carry around. This is the episode I invariably spend the most time on, since I sort of revert to Survival mode. Straight out of the gate, I start hunting down side quests. The warden? Ehhhh he'll be fine. I've got loot to hoard and pants to sew.
  11. Same here. I personally like realism mods like Better Water Management or Better Fuel Management that make containers a resource, but sometimes it's nice to get back to basics. i.e. magic water bottles!
  12. If some modder figures out how to convert old saves to work with the new release, pretty sure there's a Nobel prize of some sort for that.
  13. Nothing is being deleted, you can still play them via the time capsule. They just won't work with the new version.
  14. In Story mode Will comments about not usually needing his parka "this early in the season", so it's implied it's still pretty early in winter. Of course that logic falls through on 1000+ day survival runs...but meh. So does the lack of anything except winter.
  15. Had that happened, Will would've heard Molly and Astrid talking. That's how party lines work. Every phone rings, everyone picks up, and if the call isn't for you, you politely hang up. There is nothing at all to stop someone from eavesdropping though, which is why I'm like 99% sure it WASN'T Molly. Because Molly clearly states, she just has to keep letting it ring until Astrid picks up. The fact that it only rings a couple times (assuming you actually go to the phone and don't stand around waiting) and then goes dead is not Molly's MO. Molly will call and let it keep ringing and ringing until someone picks up. Now had Will picked up and said "Hello", and THEN the line went dead, I'd say that could reasonably be Molly. She was hoping for Astrid, someone else picked up, so she'll just try again later. But it didn't--it simply went dead before Will got to it.
  16. I personally don't use the notes much because frankly alt-tabbing to Excel works better for me. The game pauses while not active so I can take my time writing down each item I have stored away, the quantity, and the starting condition. I can use formulas to display the expected current condition of items based on how much time has passed after the starting condition, I can search it, copy, paste, etc. About the only time I use in-game notes is to leave myself a reminder for next time if I've been drinking and am not confident I'll remember what I was up to.
  17. Pretty sure it's nobody at all. Or I mean in-game it's "someone" in the sense that the phone just didn't ring itself, but it's not named character. The Hunting Lodge is a LONG ways away from Pleasant Valley. Considering how busted up the infrastructure is all the way from BR to PV, there's no reason to think they're on the same circuit. Maybe they were at one point, but not with the way all the lines are torn up now. Plus Molly said that all she has to do is keep letting it ring until someone picks up. The call in the lodge only rings a couple times and then goes dead. I suppose you could argue that Molly let it ring a couple times then hung up because she had to go pee or something and realized it wasn't a good time to be on the phone. But there's really no indication at all that it was Molly. It's 100% pure speculation. Heck, it could just as easily have been the priest, trying to figure out who the hell keeps calling and letting the phone ring over and over.
  18. I know it wasn't in the video but I'm really interested to see how the Cougar behaves...
  19. Start in Ash Canyon to get the crampons and technical pack, try for a moosehide satchel there or in TWM. Hit the TWM summit, and with that I should be outfitted well enough to head to the Far Territory.
  20. It's done WONDERS on load times for places where I have obscene stick hoards. Instead of having 1000 objects being rendered, I instead have twenty 50-stick piles. Same burn time, much less load time. It's something I've been begging for in the wish list since practically day one, and I'm glad the modding community delivered.
  21. Place Anywhere, Item Piles, and DIY. Remove Clutter only works for interior locations, but if it worked outdoors I'd definitely get rid of some of the debris on the floor. When you use Item Piles to combine loose scrap metal, it turns into a cardboard box full of scrap. Those "bricks" are actually boxes of scrap metal, stacked high enough that you can't actually see the metal protruding from the top.
  22. Well a "full tour" may never come since this is a half-assed commitment around my work and life but I'll post any significant developments! Here's the finished workroom.
  23. I figured if my longest running survivor (1000+ days) is on limited time, I'd head back home and finally fix up that old barn. First thing's first, it really needs a good workshop! (Modded)
  24. Shotguns have been romanticized by video games (I think Doom deserves most of the credit there), but the reality is they're either a powerful long-range weapon (slugs, which makes them like a rifle), or they're a medium-short ranged deterrent, which makes them like the revolver or distress pistol. With slugs, you're basically just using it like a rifle, so...yeah. No point. With shot, the pellets spread out to maybe about a foot, but because the individual pellets are so much smaller they reach terminal velocity much faster. So yeah, shot is going to start losing its effectiveness at 50 meters, and beyond 100 it's basically just like getting shot with a bunch of BB's. (I got hit by birdshot once while on a duck hunting trip in my teens and it didn't even penetrate my coat.) And also not all shotguns are created equal--are you using birdshot or buckshot? What gauge? So the next most common argument I've heard is "OK well why not use shotguns to hunt birds?" Great! You mean those crows circling overhead that would be absolutely disintegrated by a shotgun? Or all the other birds that are thousands of miles away, having migrated south for the winter? There are no birds to hunt, not anymore, and introducing birds wouldn't make any sense because of migration patterns. Shot isn't going to be effective against anything else we have in the game. So basically what we have here is just another rifle...so why bother at all?