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The stalwart devs at Silverlock are busily working on Skyrim: Special Edition's own script extender (SKSE), and have announced that a beta test may be available in mid-March. If you're an active ...
With the release of Skyrim Special Edition back in October of last year, most mods became incompatible with the new 64-bit version of Bethesda’s open world RPG. I’m sure many mourned the loss ...
In a recent post on their site, the makers of the Skyrim Script Extender announced they are working on a new version of the SKSE for the 64-bit Skyrim Special Edition.
Skyrim Special Edition has been released, and the original SKSE will not work with it,” the Skyrim Script Extender team said on its website. We are creating SKSE64 for the new 64-bit Special ...
Developers of the Skyrim Script Extender have announced plans to create and eventually test a new 64-bit version for the recently-released Skyrim: Special Edition.
This is one for those out there that mod Skyrim. And you'd be a fool not to. Not that the core game is in anyway bad, mods simply take a great thing and make it, err, greater. Like the SkyUI mod for ...
Skyrim: Special Edition is great and it was really nice that it rolled out for free on PC, but the upgrade did prove incompatible with a lot of your favourite mods. Many of these problems could be ...
However, an encryption system like CEG would get in the way of modding Skyrim, preventing the use of Script Extenders that allow modders to insert hundreds of script commands to make the game do ...
In theory, the Skyrim Script Extender could be patched to allow it to extend the scripting capabilities of the Xbox Game Pass' executable at some point in the future.