If, unfortunately, none of this works (which I highly doubt these won’t fix your problem), you should at least install NVAC as listed above because it has a crash log for the game, and it can tell you various things. Just remember above anything else to set the parameter in enbseries.ini to false, otherwise everything will look insanely blurry and bad. If you don’t play with AA or AF anyways however, there is no downside. Hardware Anti-aliasing and anisotropic filtering are not useable with ENBoost, you must use the included AA and AF solutions which are not as powerful. It should be more than capable of handling anything you can throw at your game unless something is very deeply wrong with it. ENBoost works absolute wonders for this game, it allows some people to use 4k texture replacers on everything. It looks complicated, but really isn’t.ĮNBoost does not add ENB graphics and shaders to your game, so do not worry if you don’t think your system could handle that. Very detailed instructions to get everything set up. Visit this page and scroll down slightly to read the instructions posted by newhampshirean.
If the 4GB patch did not work for you, the only thing that provides more memory for the game to use is ENBoost. The program is completely invisible unlike ENBoost. This program will passively force unused memory to be purged at set intervals, preventing out-of-memory errors. New Vegas quite frankly sucks at handling and unloading memory. One thing you should also try is Zan’s Autopurge crash protector. Only reason I mention them is because you didn’t specify if you had them or not. With these you will see increased performance and less crashes, almost everyone uses them. Both of these plugins are NVSE plugins, meaning you need nothing else than just those files. The anti-crash tool has specifically targeted code that prevents out-of-memory errors as-well as many other crashes. Next, memory errors can be prevented with NVAC.
Problem Solutionįirst of all, I believe that having heap allocation handled by NVSR is actually more efficient, so try that first.
Here is my mod list (to activate mods I only use nexus mod manager). I already created nvse_config.ini in F:\steam\steamapps\common\Fallout New Vegas enplczru\Data\NVSE with “ DefaultHeapInitialAllocMB=400” text in it.
I use only NVSE and Fake Full Screen by “Embiggen Window” program (i don’t use 4gn cause it didn’t help me and my fallout use only like 1,5Gb at most). Googling around hasn't exactly made it all that clear to me when you would need a bashed patch.I often get “Out of Memory” crash message, mostly when I open interiors or walk randomly in desert. After googling for a bit I'm not even entirely sure I need one, and like I said, my gaming experience has been stable, so far all my mods seem to be functioning properly and levelled lists seem to be working properly as well. I've also made a merged patch for all the mods I'm currently using, but no bashed patch. I've also been using YUP and I have to say, back when I was playing on console, I encountered a lot more bugs and weird stuff. With Fallout 3 and Skyrim I just sort of half assed modding the game and just slapped a lot of mods in the general direction of the games and ended up with pretty unstable games, but this seems to work perfectly.Īlso, NVAC and New Vegas Stutter Remover seem to help a lot. I've also been using NMC's texturepack and a lot of clothing and armor texture replacers which can be considered demanding GPU-wise, and so far I've yet to experience my first CTD. My ENB realism pack runs super smooth, especially after messing with the enblocal.ini a bit. Like I said, I just used the generic 4GB patcher, patched FalloutNV.exe, FalloutNVlauncher.exe and nvse_launcher.exe (basically just everything because I didn't know what I was doing ), and I haven't had any problems since.