

The Pampas set by Ralfetas works in this regard. While I did say that there won’t be anything that’s quite NSFW, some slightly sexy armor sets and bodysuits would still apply. And yes, before you ask, there’s a sexier version too. Think of it like you just ransacked The Institute or the Brotherhood of Steel and came away with a bunch of insanely eye-catching stuff. Rather than look like a scraggly scavenger, your Sole Survivor looks like a member of a highly-advanced mecha strike team. Humannature66’s armor set redefines cool and stylish as you adventure in Fallout 4’s wasteland. HN66 Sirius 12 Assault Suit by Humannature66 Note that all images used in this article are from their respective creators. Lastly, I did not include any mods which lean heavily on NSFW content (sorry CBBE).

I’ll also explain why I think a certain mod is head and shoulders above the rest, though that doesn’t do any disservice to other creators. These mods have enriched my playthroughs with ESP merging I was actually running the game with 250 mods. I’ve chosen one to three mods for each category from the Fallout 4 Nexus website (although there are also some honorable mentions). That’s what brings us to this feature - the best Fallout 4 mods of all-time. I know everyone’s hoping that mod support for Fallout 76 will be extensive simply because Bethesda’s games have often been an amazing playground for modders. The game will eventually have its own curated mods (unlike the ones that users have recently made). They are a nod to the idea that the most fun way to play a game is however the hell you want to play it.There’s something big arriving this week which can make or break Bethesda’s attempts to craft a massive online wasteland - Fallout 76. Cheat codes remind us that a game is not some unchanging monolith, but rather the culmination of a giant amount of code that can be changed, patched, shifted and tweaked, whether by the developer or the player. Too often in the AAA console landscape it's less a conversation and more of a lecture, a strict set of rules laid down from above designed to give everyone a roughly comparable - and predictable - experience. There's just something lovely about what cheat modes do about the conversation between the developer and the player.

Who doesn't want to load up the Fat Man with infinite nukes and let Diamond City know who's boss? Just the one time, maybe? And it's a shame: I remember loving cheat codes as a kid, whether I was using them because I couldn't beat a level or because I just wanted to screw around.

It's a codified nod to the cheat codes of yore, something that developers never seem to put in their games these days. The cheat menu is basically what it sounds like: a menu that gives you infinite caps, ammo, materials, perks, quest items, bobbleheads or whatever else you want (godmode is having an issue on Xbox One, it would seem).
