I've played Skyrim on and off for years, but I've finally decided to dive deep into creating a stable, visually enhanced, and gameplay-overhauled modded experience on PC, and I'm immediately overwhelmed by the sheer volume of mods and the complexity of load order management. I've installed a mod manager and started with the essential bug fixes and the unofficial patch, but I'm hesitant to add major texture packs, new quests, or gameplay overhauls like Ordinator without a clear understanding of how to resolve conflicts and ensure stability for a long playthrough. For experienced modders, what is your recommended step-by-step approach for building a mod list from the ground up? Which foundational mods and tools are non-negotiable for stability, and how do you systematically test for conflicts when adding large mod bundles or scripts that alter the same game systems?
You’re not alone here—modding Skyrim for a stable, long-term playthrough is a common challenge. A practical starting plan is to lock in a solid, tested baseline first, then layer in mods in small, testable chunks. Use MO2 (or Vortex) for profile management, LOOT for load orders, SSEEdit for cleaning, and Wrye Bash for a Bashed Patch. Build from there and test frequently rather than chasing a perfect list at once.
Step-by-step approach you can reuse: 1) decide core goals (bug fixes + UI + a couple content mods or a pure overhaul). 2) install SKSE64, USSEP, and SkyUI as your must-haves. 3) run LOOT to get a clean load order, then run SSEEdit to check for conflicts and clean masters. 4) create a Bashed Patch with Wrye Bash if you’re using leveled lists or many patches. 5) add mods in small batches (1–3 at a time), run the game for several hours, and document crashes or odd behavior. 6) if instability appears, disable the most suspect mod and rebuild patches. 7) keep a saved “known-good” profile you can fall back to.
Foundational mods and tools I’d call non-negotiable for stability: SKSE64, USSEP, SkyUI (for UI and MCM), SSE Engine Fixes (helps a lot with stability and performance on modern systems), LOOT (auto-load order), Mod Organizer 2 (or Vortex) for profiles and easier management, SSEEdit for cleaning and patching, and Wrye Bash for creating a Bash Patch. Optional but helpful: a practical