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The best Fallout 76 mods

It’s fair to say that Fallout 76 wasn’t exactly what fans were hoping for when it launched. Instead of being a single-player RPG like Fallout 4, 3, and New Vegas, 76 was a pseudo MMO where you joined multiplayer servers to play in a persistent world. A multiplayer Falloutsounds great on paper, but the execution wasn’t what people were looking for. Many years and updates later, the game is in a far better state, but not quite up to the standard of some hardcore fans. However, Bethesda games are among the most famous for the quality of mods made for them, and at this point, there are thousands of mods available for Fallout 76. We’ve scoured every inch of Appalachia to collect only the best Fallout 76 mods.

Ultimist’s High Detailed Map Plus

A map of appalachia in Fallout 76.
Bethesda

The default map in Fallout 76 looks ripped right out of a tourist’s guide. That’s cool for theming and everything, but not so useful when trying to find anything besides major locations. The map is surprisingly bare in detail considering how much walking around and exploring you do. Ultimist’s High Detailed Map Plus rips up that old map and replaces it with a much more detailed and appealing map to navigate. It marks all the normal locations you need, plus every vendor and 440 resource deposits (which you can toggle on or off to reduce clutter). It might not sound like a big deal, but any Fallout fan knows how much time you spend on the map menu.

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Better Inventory

A modded inventory in Fallout 76.
Bethesda

If there’s one screen you’ll be in longer than the map screen, it’s the one for inventory. You will be constantly picking up items, using consumables, and swapping weapons around in that clunky menu that makes it take way too long to do simple tasks. Once you install Better Inventory, you can streamline much of your item management and save hours of time. The main feature of this mod is the filter that puts weapons, food/drinks, clothing, and notes into different tabs. Each tab also shows that category’s weight so you know what to check when you get too encumbered. There are also a few handy inventory shortcuts that let you skip through tabs and go to the first or last item in a list with ease.

Glowing Items

Glowing items on a shelf in Fallout 76.
Bethesda

Bethesda loves to litter its worlds with hundreds of items all around. Usually, you don’t even know what you can or can’t pick up until you try, and then you need to know if it was even worth it. Due to its postapocalyptic setting, trash and debris are scattered all over, making it hard to notice any useful items but Glowing Items is here to guide you. This mod lets you select items from a huge list that you want to glow, as well as one of eight colors that stands out best for you. It’s a great accessibility mod, as well as one that anyone can find useful.

High Resolution Texture Pack

A desk with a globe in Fallout 76.
Bethesda

There are a handful of visual mods out there, but we think the High Resolution Texture Pack provides the best bang for your buck. This mod is a port of a similar mod for Fallout 4 that adds a ton of detail and quality to everything in Appalachia. The only downside, as is the case with almost all texture mods, is the load it puts on your PC. This mod suggests you have at least 10GB of VRAM to run it, but ideally 16GB. If you have the hardware to make it happen, this mod will push this game’s visuals up to their maximum.

Appalachia Warfare

A pipboy poster for a sound mod for Fallout 76.
Bethesda

While visual mods are made for almost any game that has mods, you hardly hear about audio mods. Appalachia Warfare takes all the base sound effects for guns and explosions and replaces them with higher-quality and more dynamic sounds. Explosions have more depth and leave a ringing in the ear, while bullets unleash powerful cracks and cause hair-raising whizzes when they barely miss. If you never thought proper sound design and realistic effects could make a big difference, just try this mod and see how much more intense the game feels.

Text Chat

Fallout 76 with a text box added.
Bethesda

Even for PC players, there’s no way to communicate in Fallout 76 through text. This is inconvenient for a number of reasons, mostly if you don’t have a microphone, but even when you do, the game uses proximity chat so you can only hear people close to your character. Instead of using an outside program to talk to your fellow players, Text Chat adds a simple but effective chat box to the game. With it, you can talk globally on all servers, only on your server, in trade chats, with groups and clans, and more. You can even see who is also using this mod in the chat menu based on the color of a player’s name.

Fallout 76 Load Time Fixer

the Fallout 76 load time mod logo.
Bethesda

The name of this mod is a little misleading since Fallout 76 Load Time Fixer doesn’t focus specifically on cutting down the game’s loading times. It does claim to reduce that by a bit, but the real time savings comes from the 10 or so seconds where you can’t control your character immediately after loading. Any time you enter the game from the main menu or load after fast traveling, the game plays out an animation of the screen fading in that you have to wait to complete before you can move. Saving even a few seconds every time you fast travel or load into the game will add up very fast.

Winter in Appalachia (early access)

Fallout 76 covered in snow.
Bethesda

West Virginia in Fallout 76 has been in a perpetual summer for its entire existence. There are some weather effects, like rain and ash storms, but nothing close to a true winter. Winter in Appalachia brings the chilly months to the wasteland with snow and holiday decorations all across the world. This mod is still being worked on, but already has new animations for collecting snow-covered plants and sound effects for walking in the snow. Even in its unfinished state, just covering the world in a blanket of snow makes it feel almost like a new map to explore.

Jesse Lennox
Jesse Lennox has been a writer at Digital Trends for over four years and has no plans of stopping. He covers all things…
The best State of Decay 2 mods
State of Decay 2 Review

You can't say State of Decay 2 hasn't gotten more than its fair share of developer support. Not only did it receive plenty of extra content and updates after launch, but it even continues to be worked on years after State of Decay 3 was announced. Being an open-world zombie survival game with tons of RPG and management elements, it wasn't long before modders saw all the potential there was to tweak, add to, and fully customize this great game to be even better. Modders have done everything from increasing the difficulty to enhancing the immersion with new lighting, so we've scavenged the net for only the best State of Decay 2 mods to recommend.
Unlock Developer Menu

When a game is still being made, developers often include a special menu they can access to change various settings on the fly to test things out. Typically, these menus are then disabled for the full release since they would essentially allow anyone to cheat and break the game. The Unlock Developer Menu mod brings that feature back so you can change all sorts of options with ease. You can think of it like accessing a command menu, only it's much more user-friendly. With it, you can do things like spawn weapons, zombies, and plague hearts, and add followers and enclaves just by hitting F2. The only thing to be aware of is that not all the functions are enabled, and the modder isn't planning on fixing them since it was not created by them, only reenabled.
No More Room In Hell

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The best Stardew Valley mods
Emily talking to the player in Stardew Valley.

After so many years of support, it might feel like there's nothing left that needs to be added or changed in Stardew Valley. This farming sim lets you live your best life in the quiet countryside with your own farm, NPCs to meet and date, Easter eggs to find, and quests to complete.

Multiple updates have only expanded the number of things to do in a game you could already spend hundreds of hours in. But the developer behind this game is just one person, and even an entire team couldn't match the output of the entire modding community. Given the meteoric success this game has had and sustained for so many years, there have been hundreds of mods created by passionate fans. These mods can make your humble little farm life feel completely fresh, as well as smooth out a couple of lingering rough edges in the game. We've farmed up the absolute best Stardew Valley mods you should try for yourself.
Stardew Valley Expanded
Each major update to Stardew Valley adds a host of new features, but one fan just couldn't wait and decided to make their own unofficial expansion called Stardew Valley Expanded. Just looking at the feature list of this mod, you could be forgiven for thinking it was a true expansion, or maybe even a sequel. It adds 27 new NPCs, 50 more locations, 27 fish, two new farms, and even updates a couple of existing things. That's not even mentioning the new music, quests, objects, festivals, and more. The entire thing was made to feel as seamless with the base game as possible, and is intended to give that same feeling of wonder and joy players had when playing the game for the first time.
NPC Map Locations

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The best Fallout New Vegas mods
A soldier with a sniper in New Vegas.

The debate around which Fallout game is best typically comes down to either Fallout 3 or New Vegas. Whichever side you land on, there's no denying that New Vegas made the most out of what it had to work with. This game was originally made by Obsidian, not Bethesda, and it had a very short development time that resulted in a game in which the technical performance couldn't quite match its narrative and mechanical ambitions. While the core was still great, it has also been over a decade since the game came out, which makes those blemishes even more evident. Because fans took so well to what this entry was trying to do, mods have kept New Vegas alive and well to this day. From basic visual enhancements to new quests and locations, here are the best mods you can get for New Vegas.
NMCS Texture Pack

Honestly, New Vegas was never a looker. Even upon release, it was a bit behind the times in terms of graphical fidelity, and two generations later, it isn't aging all that well. The NMCS Texture Pack doesn't bring every aspect of the world up to a modern standard, but what it does upgrade is incredibly impressive. This mod completely retextures roads, environments, plants, vehicles, buildings, and more. What it won't change is how the sky, water, clothing, NPCs, weapons, and a handful of other things appear. It also does not work with any DLC. Still, the majority of things you will be seeing get a great visual buff here to help breathe new life into the wasteland.
EVE - Essential Visual Enhancements

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