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PC Gamer
PC Gamer
Christopher Livingston

The best Skyrim mods: Everything from beautiful vegetables to huge expansions

Nocturnal, the Mistress of Shadows, surrounded by her birds.

The best Skyrim mods can be tough to find when there are over 72,000 of them on Nexus Mods and more than 27,000 on the Steam Workshop. There are so many that at this point if you can imagine it there's probably a mod for it—as well as plenty of things you would rather not imagine. From interface tweaks to entirely new campaigns, fully voiced companions, and of course ridiculous memes, it's all out there. Some of it is very out there.

Skyrim Console Commands
(Image credit: Bethesda)

There's no need to play Skyrim as a humble warrior. Become a giant, fly, walk through walls, spawn any item you want, and even become Santa Claus with Skyrim console commands.

It can be overwhelming to sort through all those mods, and installing a pre-canned list usually means adding a few things you don't actually want then not being able to get rid of them without messing up various dependencies. That's why our guide assumes a manual pick-and-choose style of modding, and is sorted into categories so you can find a selection of individual mods that will be compatible and suit your playstyle.

The first thing you'll need to know if you're playing Skyrim on a modern PC is that it's going to have problems running at a framerate higher than 60 fps. The physics engine wasn't designed for it, and you'll see horses float into the air and bodies bounce around, as well as hearing loud, repeated sound effects as things like water splashes loop continually. Go into your GPU software's control panel and make sure Skyrim is capped at 60 fps to fix all that.

Now we'll cover how to get started with Skyrim mods, as well as recommending some essential improvements. Check the subsequent pages for all the best Skyrim quest mods, new spells, equipment, followers, combat changes, and more.

If you're looking for Skyrim Special Edition mods, follow that link to our separate collection. These mods are for vanilla Skyrim, AKA Oldrim or Skyrim Legendary Edition.

Table of contents

Page 1: Getting started - how to install, patches, interface, quality of life, and textures
Page 2: Content mods - quests, characters, creatures, and places
Page 3: Gameplay mods - equipment, combat, magic, systems, and tweaks

How to install Skyrim mods

(Image credit: Bethesda)

Once you've found some mods you'd like to try, here are the tools you can use to get them working. Make sure you read the description page for each of your mods: many of them require specific steps and instructions.

Vortex

Replacing the old Nexus Mod Manager is Vortex, a newer program for organizing your mod loadout. Available from the Nexus Mods website, like most of the mods on our list, it will handle everything for you. It's easy to use and makes downloading, activating, and deactivating mods a breeze. It's also useful in that it supports tons of other games, including Fallout 4. 

Skyrim Script Extender

Skyrim Script Extender (SKSE) is a utility that's required for many of the more complex mods to work. Not every mod on this list demands it, but plenty do, including the essential SkyUI. You're better off just installing it up front. SKSE is now available directly through Steam, but you can still find it on the SKSE website if you prefer manual installation. 

Steam Workshop

You can also browse and use Skyrim mods via the Steam Workshop. It's easy to navigate and add them to your roster by simply clicking the subscribe button. Keep in mind that more complex mods may require a few more steps to install. Always read the description.

Patches

Unofficial Skyrim Patch

(Image credit: Bethesda)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Created by the same modders as the Unofficial Oblivion patch, the Unofficial Skyrim patch catches a huge amount of bugs the official patches don't. A lot of them are things you might never notice, like objects that were placed slightly wrong so they clip through each other, or quests that break if you do something unusual, but it's still better to have them than not. There's one for the Legendary Edition, but you might need the one for the official High Resolution textures patch if you're using the High Resolution DLC.

Fix Lip Sync

Download from: Nexus Mods

If you've ever seen a delay between an NPC's spoken dialogue and when their lips start moving, it's a long-running bug apparently caused by an optimization patch in Skyrim version 1.9. This mod fixes it.

User Interface mods

SkyUI

Download from: Nexus Mods

Skyrim's original UI is rough. SkyUI makes it easier to use, letting you sort your loot by value or weight, and your weapons by damage rating. Most importantly, SkyUI adds a mod configuration menu, letting you tweak and adjust compatible mods (including many on this list). A lot of mods don't require SkyUI and will run just fine without it, but you'll get much more out of your mods if you have it.

In other words, it's highly recommended.

RaceMenu

(Image credit: expired6978)

Download from: Nexus Mods

An improved character creation menu, with numeric displays for all sliders and the ability to choose any color for your hair, skin, or other tints rather than being limited based on race. There's a sculpt mode if you want to get right into messing with the geometry of your head, and you can turn the light illuminating your face on and off to see how your features will look in different situations, which is a blessing.

Better Dialogue Controls

(Image credit: ecirbaf)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Using a keyboard and mouse for Skyrim means sometimes the game gets confused when you're selecting a dialogue option. You've surely noticed that sometimes when you choose a response the game thinks you've chosen a different one. Skyrim's dialogue controls are weird and clunky, and this mod completely and thankfully fixes that. The same modder also gave us better message box controls.

A Quality World Map

Download from: Nexus Mods

Skyrim's map is functional but boring. A Quality World Map offers multiple ways to fix it. You can replace the map with a much more detailed world texture, with colors that help delineate the separate areas much more obviously, but there's also an option to have a paper map with a more Oblivion look if that's your thing. 

Better Free Camera

(Image credit: Utopium)

Download from: Nexus Mods

To get the perfect screenshot, normally you have to use Skyrim console commands. Better Free Camera lets you set hotkeys instead for free camera mode, toggling the HUD, clipping, pausing time or adjusting its speed, and everything else a dedicated screenshot hunter needs. Well, almost everything. Combine it with Project Proteus to pose NPCs, override their AI, and select animations.

Immersive HUD

Download from: Nexus Mods

You don't need your HUD onscreen all the time. This mod hides the crosshairs and status bars when you're not actively using them, such as outside combat. You can also toggle the compass and quest markers on and off with a keypress, and adjust their opacity.

Courier Shows Delivery

(Image credit: stradivuckos)

Download from: Nexus Mods

A courier runs up to you on the street. "I've been looking for you," they say. "Got something I'm supposed to deliver. Your hands only." And then they slip it into your backpack, where you have to hunt for it to read this urgent letter. Courier Shows Delivery makes the simple fix of having the courier's inventory appear when they hand you a communique so you can read it immediately. (There seems to be an issue with the quest-starting pamphlet about Dawnstar's museum, and that one will still be slid straight into your pocket.)

Quality of life mods

Alternate Start – Live Another Life

(Image credit: Arthmoor)

Download from: AFK Mods

If you want to begin a new game of Skyrim as someone other than the Dragonborn, this is one of several mods that give you a fresh start. Skip the opening sequence and start life as someone arriving by boat, locked in a jail cell, a visitor at an inn, an outlaw in the wilderness, and many more. Expand the options even further with New Beginnings, which adds over a dozen choices, including the option to start as a vampire, a werewolf, or even a skooma addict.  Just like the original mod, there’s a good mix of safe options along with some that are downright deadly.  

Skyrim Unbound Reborn [Alternate Start]

(Image credit: Bethesda)

Download from: Nexus Mods

An alternative to Alternate Start – Live Another Life, this is a more freeform way of deciding how your adventure begins. Rather than choosing from preset options like bandit or necromancer, when you create a new character you open the Mod Configuration menu and toggle a ton of individual options. Select your equipment and spells, how much money you own, where you begin, and whether you're the Dragonborn. You can also customize when the main questline starts, whether dragons appear, if you start with a bounty on your head, and what time of day it is. You can even set some options to random for a surprise. Once you're done, go back to the first page and click Begin Your Adventure to set off. We liked Skyrim Unbound Reborn so much, we declared it one of our mods of the week.

Skip Bleak Falls Barrow

(Image credit: Mas3th)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Alternate start mods let you skip the Helgen tutorial, but if you want to be the Dragonborn you'll still have to go through baby's first dungeon, Bleak Falls Barrow, to get the Dragonstone and unlock the Fus shout. This mod lets you skip that too, putting the Dragonstone, the Golden Claw, and a fragment of the Word Wall on a table upstairs at Dragonreach in Whiterun. For extra convenience, walk a little further and you'll find a standing stone that teleports you to High Hrothgar to meet the Greybeards rather than having to climb the mountain again. (Though you might have to walk out of their monastery and back in again if you hit a bug where they won't talk to you and progress the quest.)

Remember Lockpick Angle

Download from: Nexus Mods

The lockpick jiggles. You adjust the angle slightly. One more notch. Nocturnal, the Unfathomable Mistress of Shadows, laughs at you as the lockpick snaps. You slide the next lockpick in—and hold it completely vertical rather than inserting it anywhere near the previous position. What are you thinking, Dragonborn? This mod inserts each new lockpick at the previous one's last angle, making it easier to adjust from there.

SkyTweak

(Image credit: Grimy Bunyip)

Download from: Nexus Mods

There are 14 pages of options in SkyTweak, letting you alter variables relating to experience point gain, stealth, how vendors work, combat, magic—a little bit of everything. It's guaranteed to contain options you won't be able to live without once you've started messing with them. Want to change how far away NPCs are before they greet you, or reduce the pause between lines? How about messing with the AI's search time or how much light affects your ability to hide? Want to change the time scale, adjust fall damage, or arrow recovery chance? Some of these options exist in other mods, or Skyrim console commands, but SkyTweak slaps them all into menus you can bring up every time you're annoyed by something as minor as how frequently enemies dodge projectiles or the number of times you're allowed to hit a follower before they turn on you. 

Textures & Lighting mods

The Eyes of Beauty

(Image credit: LogRaam)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Eyes are hard to get right. If you've ever played an elf you'll know the special agony of Skyrim's alien eyeball options, which guarantee you'll end up looking like you've come to abduct and probe the residents of Tamriel rather than live among them. The Eyes of Beauty gives some more attractive options, and comes in two versions: one just for you, and another that automatically gives NPCs attractive, shimmering orbs of sight.

Rustic Clothing

(Image credit: Gamwich)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Rustic Clothing doesn't mean "rustic" in the sense of crude or unfinished, but simply rural and unaffected. This high-resolution replacer gives NPCs clothes that don't look smeary when viewed up close, meaning that you won't wince every time you have a conversation with someone in first-person. Instead, you'll be able to make out patterns and recognize different fabrics. It goes beyond regular clothes to improve the look of bandages, fur armor, the Masque of Clavicus Vile, and a handful of other wearable but arguably not "clothing" items.

Total Character Makeover 

Download from: Nexus Mods

A compilation of changes to existing NPC appearances, the Total Character Makeover makes everyone in Skyrim look better without making them too much better-looking, if you catch our drift. No nudity, no anime hair, no glamazon makeup, just a suite of new textures and tweaks to everything from beards to vampire fangs. 

Enhanced Lights and FX

Download from: Nexus Mods

You may have noticed some things in Skyrim that should be sources of light don't actually cast any illumination, while in other places things are brightly lit for no real reason. Enhanced Lights and FX fixes that, making light shine where it should. There are options for just how dark you want interiors to be, and going in on those will mean torches and light spells become vital. It also makes some nice tweaks to the appearance of smoke.

2K Textures

Download from: Nexus Mods

Does what it says, replacing Skyrim's textures: sky, water, architecture, clothing, clutter, reflections, and so on, of the cities, towns, dungeons, and landscapes. There's a full version if your PC can handle it, but there's also a lite version that should make things look nicer without killing your performance.

Climates of Tamriel

Download from: Nexus Mods

This comprehensive mod adds hundreds of new weather systems, a huge library of new cloud systems, a new sun, improved lighting for both fans of a fantasy look and realistic visuals, and even audio improvements. With all of these systems combining, each day in Skyrim will feel different from the last.

Real Clouds

(Image credit: Bethesda)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Designed to be compatible with weather mods like Climates of Tamriel, Real Clouds adds "pseudo-volumetric" clouds that look three-dimensional. You'll be able to see sheets of distant rain falling, and clouds at varying heights that react to the current weather. Even if you're not using a mod that alters the way weather works, this provides some nice and diverse cloud cover. You can even fly through these fluffy sky friends.

aMidianBorn Book of Silence

(Image credit: CaBaL- EmeraldReign-the AMB team)

Download from: Nexus Mods

A pretty hefty collection of high-quality replacements for Skyrim textures, covering creatures, weapons, armor, unique items, and the Dragonborn DLC, all as separate files. Consider combining with Rustic Armor and Weapons, which plugs a few gaps relating to Dark Brotherhood, Forsworn, and Daedric gear.

Static Mesh Improvement

Download from: Nexus Mods

This mod edits a number of 3D models in the game, and with over 700 meshes placed in over 15,000 locations in the world, it's a welcome difference. You'll notice better-looking architectural elements, furniture, objects in the landscape, and all sorts of other models that didn't get much attention from Bethesda.

Glorious Doors of Skyrim

(Image credit: hype1)

Download from: Nexus Mods

You're going to spend a lot of time looking at doors, whether you barrel through city streets on the way to the next NPC you need to find for a quest, or sneak through dungeons at a cautious crawl. Glorious Doors of Skyrim adds new meshes for some of the methods of ingress you'll see repeated over and over in ruins and forts, as well as some of specific ones that should look particularly fancy, like the gate of Whiterun, and the doors of Dragonsreach and Mistveil Keep. It also animates dwemer doors so you can see the gears turn as these mechanical marvels open. 

Sounds of Skyrim

Download from: Nexus Mods

Get immersed in new audio—tons of it. Hundreds of new sounds effects are included to make dungeons and sewers spookier, enhance the wilderness and wildlife, and make cities and villages more lively and real. This mod is a treat for your ears, and has customizable modules for each type of area.

FXAA Injector

Download from: Nexus Mods

Enhances your graphics with FXAA and other post effects, such as sharpening and bloom, creating crisper visuals and more vibrant colors. Conveniently, you can adjust these settings while you play by alt-tabbing out and moving the sliders on the mod's desktop utility.

Skyrim Flora Overhaul

Download from: Nexus Mods

This mod comes in three different versions, depending on how drastically you want to change your game. All versions promise more luxurious trees and bark, taller grass, and prettier plant life. The heavier versions completely replace the trees altogether and give you lusher greens for a summery feel.

Realistic Water Two

Download from: Nexus Mods

Realistic Water Two, drawing and expanding on the work of some earlier water mods, adds better ripples, larger splashes, re-textured foam and faster water flow in streams, bobbing chunks of ice, and even murky, stagnant-looking water in dungeons. It's the next best thing to getting wet.

Enhanced Camera

(Image credit: LogicDragon)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Remaining in first-person mode helps a game feel immersive, and this mod does that in spades. Not only can you look down and see your entire body while playing, but other activities such as crafting, cooking, riding horses and even riding dragons won't break you out of first-person mode.

JS Lockpicking UI

(Image credit: johnskyrim)

Download from: Nexus Mods

When you're sick of staring at that low-res circular lock every time you want to open something the man doesn't want you to open, try the JS Lockpicking UI. Now those locks look shiny and new. Also comes with a remade version of Nocturnal's Skeleton Key, should you hang onto that particular Daedric artifact.

Book Covers

Download from: Nexus Mods

It may not seem like that big of a deal, but these little high-res book covers do make for an extremely pleasant upgrade over the standard, muddily-textured ones. When you're relaxing at home or perusing (or robbing) a bookstore or library, make sure you've installed this lovely cover mod. Unless you've got Legacy of the Dragonborn installed already, that is. Legacy of the Dragonborn includes Book Covers, and will cause bugs if you have it installed separately as well.

Hearthfire Dolls Are Ugly 

Download from: Nexus Mods

Because they are! What self-respecting parent wants to give their kid a dirty, beat-up naked doll? Instead, give them an actual cute dolly, or an adorable teddy bear in a variety of different colors.

Content & gameplay mods

Table of contents

Page 1: Getting started - how to install mods, patches, interface, and textures
Page 2: Content mods - quests, characters, creatures, and places
Page 3: Gameplay mods - weapons, skills, systems, and tweaks

Table of Contents

Page 1: Getting started - How to install mods, patches, interface, and textures
Page 2: Content mods - quests, characters, creatures, and places
Page 3: Gameplay mods - weapons, skills, systems, and tweaks

These content mods for Skyrim can keep you playing for years. From the full-sized fan expansion Enderal to new cities and factions, there's so much you can add to the world of Skyrim. Get adventurin'.

Quests and expansions

Clockwork

(Image credit: Antistar)

Download from: Nexus Mods

You won't find many Skyrim quest mods with Silent Hill and Fritz Lang's Metropolis among their inspirations, but Clockwork isn't just any Skyrim mod. It's a three-in-one storyline that takes you through a haunted mine where you'll be tormented by a singular spirit, a clockwork castle where revived dwemer automatons have created an outpost of modern convenience, and an underground realm run by maddened relics who've lost their masters. It's a sizable mod, and one you'll need to leave your followers behind for, but it's well worth taking several hours out of your playthrough to sink into this long bath of atmospheric and cleverly designed questing.

The Forgotten City

Download from: Nexus Mods

This extensive mod not only gives you a new city to explore, but a murder mystery to solve, NPCs to interrogate, secrets to uncover, and, oh yeah, a chance to do some time travel. Voiced by over a dozen actors, this mod took years of development time and is recommended for characters over level five. We tried it out here. (The Forgotten City has also been made into an excellent standalone game.) 

Enderal: Forgotten Stories

(Image credit: SureAI)

Download from: Steam

This total conversion mod creates an entirely new world, very nearly the size of Skyrim itself, and populates it with new dungeons, quests, monsters, and fully voiced NPCs. Some of Skyrim's systems have also been tweaked, there's a new custom story to enjoy, and a good 50+ hours of new adventures to be hard. Read our impressions of the opening hours of Enderal

Brynjolf and the Riften Guild – Birthright

(Image credit: Elizabeth Jackson Hall)

Download from: Nexus Mods

When you wrap up the Thieves Guild questline, the lack of an epilogue feels a bit jarring. Even your mentor Brynjolf doesn't have anything to say or offer you after you've saved the guild together. This fully voiced quest mod, which splices together existing dialogue to make new lines, finally gives us closure. Brynjolf's new quests make him romanceable too, but you can also finally unlock the guild's vault, and solve the mystery of the orphan thief Rune's mysterious backstory.

Pirates of Skyrim – The Northern Cardinal Under the Black Flag 

(Image credit: BigBizkit)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Become captain of your own ship, then commit acts of piracy or do battle with pirates. The only thing missing is being able to sail in real-time, though that was unlikely to ever be an option. Instead, once you've completed a short questline to unlock your upgradeable ship and recruited at least three crew by giving sailors' journals to your followers, you can fast travel out into the Sea of Ghosts, then either dive for treasure or look through the telescopes for ships to board. You can raid pirate ships if you'd rather pretend to be a pirate hunter, or faction warships if you're playing privateer. Then, after every victory, line your ship's trophy room with the booty.

Moonpath to Elsweyr

(Image credit: Tomas Sala)

Download from: Nexus Mods

For those who are sick of snowy mountains, Moonpath to Elsweyr offers two brand new environments: lush jungle and barren desert. This quest mod takes you to the khajiit homeland of Elsweyr, which you can travel across in your airship. Did I mention you get an airship? You get an airship. We spoke to its creator about making one of the first Skyrim quest mods

Legacy of the Dragonborn 

(Image credit: icecreamassassin)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Legacy of the Dragonborn adds a gallery in Solitude where you can keep mementos of your time in Skyrim. It's a museum about you, with space for almost every unique item in the game. All those quest rewards and Daedric artifacts you went to so much trouble to earn but don't actually use can be displayed in a beautiful building with its own library, store room, and more. The curator hands out quests to help fill it, there's an entire archeology system with its own perks, and Legacy is compatible with several major quest mods like Moonpath, Moon and Star, and Undeath so you can display items from those as well. The only downside is that it won't recognize items received before installing it, so it's worth starting a fresh save.  

Become High King of Skyrim

Download from: Nexus Mods

With great power comes great responsibility. But what about great rewards? With all of your accomplishments and deadly abilities, it would make sense for you to become King of Skyrim, don't you think? Move into a huge castle, have your own army follow you everywhere, and throw citizens in prison or have them beheaded. It's good to be the king.

Imperial Mail 

Download from: Nexus Mods

Post offices may not sound like an exciting addition to Skyrim, but Imperial Mail adds a heck of a lot of convenience. Once you open an account at either the central office in Solitude or any of the marked taverns, you can forward equipment between them for a fee—meaning you can send a bunch of heavy gear back home after a quest, then carry on. There are also quests on offer if you want to help the Imperial Mail out by delivering messages, and it's compatible with Legacy of the Dragonborn so you can send items direct to the gallery.

Faction: Pit Fighter

Download from: Steam Workshop

Miss the arena? This quest mod adds a group of pit fighters you can join to the Gray Quarter of Windhelm, each of them voice-acted. The bouts take place in bespoke arenas outside the bounds of the map, and you can choose to fight one-on-one, against teams, or against wild animals. You'll have to wait between fights, so it's a good faction to visit in between other questlines. If you use the Open Cities mod download this version instead, and make sure to read the notes on that page to get the voices working.

The Paarthurnax Dilemma 

Download from: AFK Mods

Ever wanted to tell the Blades to get bent when they tell you to kill your dragon bro? Well, now you can! With this mod from Arthmoor, you now have the option to explain matters to the Blades and make them see reason (although you might have to get a bit forceful—darn).

Cutting Room Floor

Download from: AFK Mods

Adds in a lot of content that Bethesda cut before release, including NPCs, dialogue, items, quests, and locations like villages, towers, farms, mills, and more. The mod author, Arthmoor, also organized and cleaned up the code so that everything would make sense and run smoothly. 

Sea of Ghosts

Download from: Steam Workshop

Ahoy, matey! Fancy yourself a ship captain, but not in a piratical way? This mod lets you acquire a ship, hire a crew, and set sail for a number of quests on the Sea of Ghosts. There are seven quests scattered over a number of new islands, and the mod features professional voice acting to boot.

Enhanced Skyrim Factions - The Companions

Download from: Nexus Mods

Ever thought it was pretty stupid that you got into the Circle after only doing a few minor quests, or that you were railroaded into becoming a werewolf? With this mod, you get a lot more quests, becoming a werewolf is your choice, and you can battle the Silver Hand with members other than Farkas or Aela the Huntress.

Undeath

Download from: Nexus Mods

As the saying goes: if you can't beat 'em, join 'em. Alternately, you can beat 'em and join 'em. I'm talking about necromancers, in this case. Undeath is a custom quest in which you're tasked with wiping out an evil cabal of necromancers, with the twist that you can choose to continue their dark unholy work. You can even perform a ritual that will allow you to become a powerful lich and command an army of the undead. It's meant for players over level 30. We covered it here.

Moon and Star

Download from: Nexus Mods

A dangerous criminal from Morrowind has arrived in Skyrim, and your quest to track him down will take you to a new town and an inventive, puzzle-filled dungeon, introduce you to several new NPCs including merchants and traders, and outfit you with new weapons and spells.

Helgen Reborn

Download from: Nexus Mods

A huge and fantastic quest mod that centres around rebuilding and ruling the town of Helgen, also known as "that place that got burnt down at the start of the game." Following the quest will lead you to creating a ragtag bunch of misfits to act as the town guard, while the city itself slowly expands around you.

You also wind up with the coolest player home ever designed: read our article about it.

Companions and NPCs

Inigo

(Image credit: Smartbluecat)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Maybe you don't think a blue khajiit who follows you around commenting on everything and being sarcastic about Lydia is what Skyrim needs, but trust us on this. Inigo is a follower with tons of dialogue, some tied to his own questline and more that crops up at appropriate times depending on the location you're at. He can be told where to go and what to do by whistling, and will follow you even if you've got an existing companion, chatting away with them thanks to skilfully repurposed voice lines.

Vilja in Skyrim

(Image credit: Emma Amgepo Lycanthrops)

Download from: Nexus Mods

A sequel to a much-loved Oblivion mod (which Terry Pratchett contributed to), Vilja in Skyrim adds the great-granddaughter of the original Vilja as a follower. She's an alchemist with her own questline to follow and a unique system to give her orders, essentially spells bound to hotkeys that can be used to co-ordinate attacks. Like Inigo she doesn't count toward your follower limit, and if introduced to each other Inigo and Vilja will even chat among themselves. 

Interesting NPCs

(Image credit: Bethesda)

Download from: Nexus Mods

If you'd like even more new companions, this mod adds a ton of additional followers with custom voices and tons of location-based commentary, their own questlines, and some interesting and unique appearances. If you find one you particularly like, great news—you can marry them.

Diverse Guards

Download from: AFK Mods

Ever noticed that Skyrim's Imperial army is a no-girls-allowed club? Oh sure, there are female named characters like Legate Rikke, but the actual rank-and-file soldiers, with the exception of Windhelm and Riften, are always male. This mod edits the list of models that town guards and Imperial soldiers are randomly drawn from, adding some women into the mix, and also adds in several different faces for the male guards.

Immersive Patrols

Download from: Nexus Mods

Immersive Patrols creates a series of patrols for Skyrim's different factions: Stormcloak, Imperial, Thalmor, Dawnguard, bandits, and so on. Occasionally these routes intersect, resulting in two opposed factions fighting to the death. Imperials and Stormcloaks regularly clash at designated warzones, with the survivors either reinforcing or taking control of the nearest fort. It adds a tremendous amount of life to Skyrim's conflict, and generates far more of those emergent clashes we all love to watch.

Nether's Follower Framework

(Image credit: Bethesda)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Everyone knows a properly balanced adventuring party consists of three-to-six heroes, and just one NPC companion couldn't possibly be enough. Nether's Follower Framework is the best option out of several mods that let you recruit more followers—up to 10 at a time. (Not counting custom companions like Inigo, who you don't need to integrate with Nether's Follower Framework.) This mod also has tweakable options that let you decide whether followers ride mounts, create outfit sets for them, access a separate storage inventory that lets them pack-mule items you don't want them to use, and plenty more.

Travelers of Skyrim

Download from: Nexus Mods

The roads of Skyrim are typically pretty empty, except for you and the occasional bandit who is forced to make his living trying to rob you since you're the only person on the roads. This mod adds dozens of fellow travelers who move between the cities and towns. Now you'll encounter traveling merchants, alchemists, mercenaries, and mages when you hit the road.

Cats of the Jarls

(Image credit: gg77, Bethesda)

Download from: Nexus Mods

The Jarls all have cats. The cats all have little outfits. Is it lore-friendly? Who cares? I mean, look at the little boots. You might want to go with the version without purring because these little house cats can start sounding like a parade of classic cars if you listen long enough. If you don't want cats for Jarls, perhaps you just want the Creatures of Nirn - Khajit Alfiq mod that it's based on, which adds the tiny khajiit species to the game. Remember, they do not like being mistaken for house cats.

Locations

Daedric Shrines

(Image credit: Nickorasu and Billyro)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Sure, Azura gets a huge statue because she's the one Daedric Prince with a decent PR department, but worshippers of the other Demon Lords of Misrule have to hide their devotion away in dungeons or modest shrines that only appear if you complete certain quests. Sheogorath and Sanguine get nothing even if you do finish their sidequests (which are two of the best in the whole game). This mod fixes that by adding shrine statues for them, while replacing the statues of those who do appear with newer models. Going above and beyond, it also replaces the statues of Dibella, both big and small, even though the goddess of love is technically one of the Nine Divines. Comes in 2K and 4K versions.

Bigger Dragon Bridge

(Image credit: Bethesda)

Download from: Nexus Mods

There's no way you could fit a dragon on Dragon Bridge. It looks like it should have a warning sign that says "no more than three sheep abreast". If you think the architectural feature that the town of Dragon Bridge in Haafingar Hold derives its name from should be a little more impressively scaled, this mod bumps it up. Now it looks like something you could get at least six sheep across in a row.

Airship Dev Aveza

Download from: Nexus Mods

Want your own flying ship? Yeah, course you do. This takes the airship model from the Moonpath to Elsweyr quest mod and combines it with the interactions from a separate skyship mod to make the best flying fantasy you'll get. The Dev Aveza is docked behind Solitude, and once it's yours can be flown all over the map. It's a much easier way to get to the top of the Throat of the World than walking, and it's got room on board for all your belongings.

Hidden Hideouts of Skyrim

Download from: Nexus Mods

Puts a ton of hidden shelters in the game, dotted all over the landscape. They're great fun to stumble upon and perfect for outlaws to stash their stuff or just disappear from the law. The mod is customizable depending on how easily players want to find these places (you can turn map markers off).

Ranger Cabins

Download from: Nexus Mods

Pair with Corners of Skyrim, these mods work together to enhance a survival playthrough. The first puts a hunter cabin in each Hold, which can be used as a basic starting player home. Also includes some lore-friendly weapons and arrows for ranger characters, including a "secret stash" of better weapons out in the woods of Falkreath. Corners of Skyrim puts even smaller shelters in the game, great as emergency shelters that offer a few basic necessities. They both feature creative architecture and are lore-friendly. Players can decide if they want to see NPCs living in the shelters or not.  

Creatures & Enemies

The Sinister Seven

(Image credit: Bethesda)

Download from: Nexus Mods

If you enjoy the feeling of being hunted, The Sinister Seven delivers. As you level up you'll be pursued by more and more challenging assassins, including seven bosses who wear unique magical masks. The first of those appears when you reach level 12, with another every even-numbered level after that. Though sometimes they'll attack you in a settlement and get mobbed by guards, they can also appear while you're weakened from a previous fight or slogging through the wilderness, resulting in a tough duel you might have to give up and run away from.

Really Useful Dragons

Download from: Nexus Mods

You've got multiple options for replacing Skyrim's dragons with something goofy-looking. The "Really Useful Dragons mod" adds Thomas the Tank Engine, who seems to make it into even more mods than Shrek these days. For another replacement route, Macho Dragons turns them into 'Macho Man' Randy Savage. Both are hilarious and creepy in their own way. Note that the first actually adds a variety of characters from Thomas the Tank Engine, if that's a selling point for you.

No Spiders

(Image credit: FancyPantz)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Arachnophobes might appreciate the mod that replaces the spider textures with Spider-Man, although it still looks freaky as all get-out to me. For a more lore-friendly  attempt at getting rid of the bugs, Insects Begone swaps spiders for bears and chaurus for skeevers as well as deleting spiderwebs and other arachnid clutter.

Enhanced Mighty Dragons Reborn

Download from: Nexus Mods

Guess what? You're not the only one who can shout, Dragonborn. This mod gives dragons a whole new toolbox of spells and shouts, new abilities like disarming attacks and the power to summon animals or other monsters. One can raise the dead, another can't fly—it's a skeleton—but uses deadly physical attacks. It's completely customizable as well, in terms of difficulty, frequency, and loot. We tried out these new dragons here.

Automatic Variants

Download from: Nexus Mods

There are a lot of excellent retexture mods available for Skyrim, but the sad thing is that you can only ever use one at a time. Automatic Variants exists to correct that problem. It allows Skyrim to randomly choose different skins from a pool of variants. Pick a bunch you like, and the mod will distribute those textures for you in the game.

Bellyache's Animal and Creature Pack

Download from: Nexus Mods

While it doesn't add new species, this mod does add around 100 recolored or touched-up textures for Skyrim's animals, everything from goats to bears to werewolves to the oft-discussed mudcrabs. You can choose from high or medium resolutions.

Realistic Animals and Predators

Download from: Nexus Mods

Animals have been revamped with better AI and more realistic behavior. Bears will hibernate in winter, animals will travel to water to drink each day, and predators not only hunt but whatever they consume will remain in their inventory (belly) for a while. Instead of always attacking, they may flee, or simply just watch you. Plus, you won't just see full-grown animals but also their young following them around.

Table of Contents

Page 1: Getting started - How to install mods, patches, interface, and textures
Page 2: Content mods - quests, characters, creatures, and places
Page 3: Gameplay mods - weapons, skills, systems, and tweaks

Table of Contents

Page 1: Getting started - How to install mods, patches, interface, and textures
Page 2: Content mods - quests, characters, creatures, and places
Page 3: Gameplay mods - weapons, skills, systems, and tweaks

Some of these Skyrim mods overhaul and add to the game's item pool, while others add entirely new systems and ways to play. Want to go fishing? Turn Skyrim into a survival game? It's all here.

Weapons & equipment

Supersafe Dwarven Rocket Boots

(Image credit: Enai Siaion)

Download from: Nexus Mods

You think the dwemer just walked from place to place? Hell, no. When you're magical enough to wipe your entire species' existence from reality then walking is for chumps. That's why they definitely used these Supersafe Dwarven Rocket Boots, which will launch you into the air in a way that's not at all dangerous to your health and wellbeing, though it might make you look kind of like a goofball. (Slowfall spell not included.)

Lustmord Vampire Armor

(Image credit: AmethystDeceiver)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Whether you're a vampire, a brooding vampire hunter, or just so goth you shit bats, you'll want the Lustmord armor system. It comes with multiple customizable parts, including a garter with a surprising amount of extra storage space, and if you consume a blood potion while wearing the armor it temporarily becomes more effective. Includes a crossbow with exploding bolts, too. To get the armor you'll need to undertake a mini quest, which will grant you a spell that opens a special crafting menu. You're going to need a lot of silver ingots, leather, and vampire dust.

Cloaks of Skyrim 

Download from: Nexus Mods

It's not real fantasy if people aren't wearing big flappy cloaks. Cloaks of Skyrim populates the world with a variety of new capes and cloaks, automatically adding them to random guards and bandits and so on, which makes them look much more impressive. And then you can loot those impressive cloaks off their corpses. It's worth adding 360 Walk and Run Plus as well, which prevents some of the clipping issues that otherwise ruin the effect. There's nothing to be done about argonian and khajiit tails, however, so this mod simply hides them when cloaks are worn.

Fall of the Space Core 

Download from: Steam Workshop

A collaboration between Valve and Bethesda to celebrate the opening of the Skyrim Steam Workshop, this mod adds the space core from Portal 2. Yeah, the little guy who is obsessed with space. He falls to earth when you're near Whiterun and can be picked up, then crafted into armor. Make sure to keep an eye on your skills screen for another effect added by this mod.

Wearable Lanterns

(Image credit: Chesko)

Download from: Nexus Mods

If you're using lighting mods you'll notice that night-time in Skyrim has become much darker. Spells and torches can help, but warriors who want to use their off-hand are out of luck. Chesko's Wearable Lantern mod sorts out this problem, letting you clip a light source to your belt, front or rear. Companions can also carry the lanterns, and will automatically douse them when you enter sneak mode.

Books Books Books

Download from: Nexus Mods

There are plenty of books in Skyrim, but what if there were… more? Books Books Books adds more than 200 books, many from previous Elder Scrolls games, to the College of Winterhold's library as well as to leveled lists, meaning they'll show up as random loot and be sold by merchants. If you want to read the 36 Sermons of Vivec from Morrowind while you're playing Skyrim, here you go. Books Books Books also includes some apocryphal texts from The Imperial Library website written by Elder Scrolls developers.

Belt Fastened Quivers

Download from: Nexus Mods

Belt Fastened Quivers moves all arrow quivers from the back, where they often clip through things like backpacks or cloaks, down to the waist, adding new animations for the new position. It was originally made as part of Frostfall, so if you're using that you don't need the standalone mod. If you aren't, however, it's still well worth getting just to stop your arrows from clipping through the items from Immersive Amours and Wet and Cold.

Unique Uniques

Download from: Nexus Mods

Skyrim is full of unique items with fascinating lore behind them, but unfortunately very few of them have the looks to go with their backstory. InsanitySorrow's Unique Uniques adds new textures and meshes for several of the game's unique weapons, giving you a great excuse to bust out Dragonbane again.

Project Flintlock

(Image credit: Ghosu)

Download from: Nexus Mods

A lot of games have been called "Skyrim with guns" but now Skyrim fits that description too, thanks to this mod that lets you carry a blunderbuss, a flintlock rifle, and a grenade launcher. With custom sounds and bayonets, it's time to introduce those primitive Skyrim screwheads to your boomstick. James had an interesting time with Project Flintlock.

Skyrim 40,000

(Image credit: Bethesda)

Download from: Steam Workshop

For the times when you feel like saying to hell with canon and just being a space marine from Warhammer 40,000. You get access to the full suite of transhuman abilities, able to hold your breath basically forever, see in the dark, and spit acid. There's a power for bumping your height up to proper space marine scale and then back down when you get sick of being humongous too. To get a full suit of ceramite in your chosen legion's colors you'll need to craft it, though the only ingredient needed is money. Craftable weapons include plasma and bolt pistols, power swords, chainswords, and more. Save your game before you craft a chainsword, since they can cause crashes. The Dwemer Autoblade mod is a safer option. 

New systems

Simply Climb

(Image credit: Bethesda)

Download from: Nexus Mods

"See that mountain? You can clumsily wallhack up it by hammering the space bar while you run directly into it and flick the mouse left and right." Skyrim doesn't really live up to the promise of its mountainous landscape, and as soon as you leave the path to go exploring you end up clacking away at the keyboard like a maniac. Simply Climb gives you a climb button, mapped to right-ctrl by default, that shifts you upwards and forwards at the cost of some stamina (the amount you climb is determined by your light armor skill). There's no animation for this so it's recommended for use in first-person.

Cleric

(Image credit: Bethesda)

Download from: Nexus Mods

If only building a relationship with divinity in the real world was this simple. As you earn XP by interacting with shrines or spending time at temples, you'll be able to afford perks like the ability to turn undead or resurrect fallen allies. Access the Cleric mod via the Mod Configuration menu and you'll see your current level and number of unspent perks. A good first perk is Bless, a spell that buffs allies and earns clerical XP, which you can also use to reforge any god's amulet into a blessed amulet that earns clerical XP while you're wearing it. After that, you can diversify into a Crusader who gets bonuses when fighting chosen enemies or a Monk who specializes in martial arts or dragon shouts. Alternatively, become a Cultist of the Daedric Princes who curses those who offend you. Unlike some other religion mods, there's no guesswork in working out how to please your chosen deity or what they'll consider sins, with everything spelled out on the menu.

Fishing in Skyrim

Download from: Nexus Mods

A great addition to survival playthroughs. No more fishing with your bare hands! Adds fishing poles, fishing nets, a bait mechanic, spellbooks, and the explosive "Dwarven boomfishing" ability. You can also fish up new and exciting junk, some of which you can sell off for extra gold.

Moonlight Tales

Download from: Nexus Mods

Being a lycanthrope is so much better with this mod, which features new music, over 200 new beast skins, new enemies, and lots of customization through MCM. Also, who doesn't want to try being a werebear?

Tame the Beasts of Skyrim 2

Download from: Nexus Mods

You don't have to slaughter every creature in Skyrim: you can also tame them, keep them on a farm, and have them accompany you on quests. Whether you want a pet mammoth or a pet chicken, this mod will allow you to assemble an impressive bestiary of loyal creatures. You can even breed them to create more powerful animals. Here's our write-up.

Alchemy and Cooking Overhaul

Download from: Nexus Mods

Spice up cooking and alchemy with this expansive mod that adds dozens of new ingredients, recipes, and effects. Portable alchemy stations mean you can craft on the go, potions can be sorted from weakest to strongest, and you'll even be able to cook up alchemical bombs to hurl at your enemies—even while on horseback.

Honed Metal

Download from: Nexus Mods

Does your character have better things to do than learn smithing, or are they opposed to getting their hands dirty like a common peasant? With this mod, you can simply hire blacksmiths to craft, temper, and hone your gear for you. It's a fantastic gold dump, as they'll automatically craft everything to the very best of their ability and charge you for it. Different blacksmiths also have different skills—the smith in Solitude can craft up to Legendary, but not so much the smith in Riverwood. Eorlund Gray-Mane is basically a smithing god. MCM supported with lots of customization options.

Survival & Immersion

Frostfall

Download from: Nexus Mods

It's cold in Skyrim, and Frostfall lets you really feel it. An immersive survival system tracks weather, climate, time of day, and even the type of clothing you're wearing to determine how cold you are. It also allows you to gain experience in terms of camping and endurance skill, and a new ability helps you find the creatures and items you'll need to survive.

Realistic Needs and Diseases

Download from: Nexus Mods

In Skyrim you may contract a disease or two from time to time, but they're typically unchanging and you can deal with them at your leisure. This mod makes diseases progressive, meaning they get worse and worse until they're cured, though there's also a chance your might fight off the infection with bed rest. Hunger and thirst also have stages of severity, food can spoil, and getting enough sleep is important. It's entirely customizable as well.

Wet and Cold

Download from: Nexus Mods

You're not the only one dealing with the harsh elements in Skyrim. Using this mod, NPCs will bundle up in the cold, move inside if its raining, and do their best to avoid blizzards. The mod also adds effects like wet-sounding footsteps, visible vapor from your breath when it's chilly, and reduced movement speed in heavy snow and strong wind.

Hunterborn

Download from: Nexus Mods

This mod provides a more immersive experience for hunters. No longer do you simply yank loot or food out an animal's inventory, you can now dress the carcass, skin it, and butcher it. You can even carry the entire animal back to your camp or to a vendor. The mod comes with hunting knives, dozens of new ingredients that can be harvested, and new recipes.

Campfire

Download from: Nexus Mods

Intending to make outdoor living a robust experience, this mod lets you build several different kinds of fires, from a weak and flickering fire to a roaring blaze suitable for cooking. You can also buy or craft camping gear like tents and tanning racks, and backpacks that display your various cooking pots and waterskins. If you're married, your spouse can camp with you. Here's our piece about it.

Skyrim on Skooma

(Image credit: JaySerpa)

Download from: Nexus Mods

It's a bit of a downer that Skyrim reduces skooma to a simple stamina potion when it's supposed to be a potent hallucinogen. Here's a mod that makes skooma what it should be: a one-way ticket to weirdtown. Every time you neck a bottle of khajiit quencher you're treated to a colorful psychedelic vision that bends reality, whether it deletes your head, turns you into a beer bottle, makes you giant-sized, or introduces you to an imaginary goat named Bartholomew. Hi, Bartholomew!

Combat & magic

Spectraverse – Magic of the Magna-Ge

(Image credit: Enai Siaion)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Destruction magic's a bit underpowered, you say? That's why you need Spectraverse, which adds spells that follow enemies while damaging them, levitate them into the air, let you throw lightning grenades, and summon "a flying saucer from the future with a devastating laser beam." The default version of Spectraverse packages these wild and sometimes wacky spells into a questline that's heavy on the deep Elder Scrolls lore and will trigger after you reach level three, but check the files page for a version that simply lets you buy them from Nelacar in Winterhold. 

The Dance of Death

Download from: Nexus Mods

Bethesda left several unassigned kill moves lurking in Skyrim's code when the game was released, including some very cool shield-bash kills. The Dance of Death re-enables them and re-organizes all kill moves so that they're gradually unlocked as you earn perks. It also includes a full menu that lets you control the rate of kill moves. Alternatively there's VioLens — A Killmove Mod, which features much of the same functionality but also works for ranged attacks. 

Immersive College of Winterhold

Download from: Nexus Mods

Ever thought the College of Winterhold should better resemble an institution of higher learning? This mod adds awesome visuals, ongoing experiments, the ability to specialize in certain schools of magic, and even an option to refuse the title of Arch-Mage (and give it to Tolfdir instead). Custom options in MCM. 

Apocalypse—Magic of Skyrim

Download from: Nexus Mods

Apocalypse adds 140 new spells to Skyrim, most of them pretty well balanced. These aren't just "spray lightning/fire/cold until someone dies" spells either. There's a whole variety of cool summons, disabling effects, and unusual attacks available.

Lost Grimoire

(Image credit: Steelfeathers)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Here's another 120+ spells, all seamlessly inserted into the vendor interfaces of Skyrim's wizards. Lost Grimoire's spells aren't super wacky, but a few are what you might call unusual. Sleight of Hand swaps your weapon for the one in your target's hand, while Infestation diseases the target and makes spiders explode from their corpse, which then spread the infection to others. There are spells to disguise yourself as a member of a faction while wearing their armor, walk on water, and give yourself claws. New, stealthy damage spells are heightened by a change that adds sneak attack damage to destruction magic, making magical assassin a valid playstyle. Also, you can summon a ghost mammoth. 

Arcanum

(Image credit: Bethesda, modded by Kosorsomesaykosm)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Arcanum is another enormous magic mod, which adds over 100 spells inspired by all sorts of fantasy settings. It includes spells from schools of Destruction, Restoration, Illusion, and Conjuration. When you're feeling experimental, you can also use its spell crafting system to throw together spell effects and visual effects to make your own combinations.

Sneak Tools

(Image credit: Borgut1337)

Download from: Nexus Mods

There should be more to stealth than just becoming invisible and gaining damage bonuses. Now you can be a genuine slippery, filthy, sneaky type. Slit the throats of the unaware. Knock people unconscious from behind. Douse torches and lanterns to move through the shadows. Add an arsenal of trick arrows, including one that launches ropes that allows you to climb walls. Wear masks that hide your identity. You'll need to be careful with the last one, as sometimes quest NPCs won't talk to you if you're wearing a mask. Even the Nightingale Sentinel won't start up a conversation while you're wearing a Nightingale mask, so powerful is its magical anonymity.

Convenient tweaks

Project Proteus

(Image credit: Bethesda / Phenderix)

Download from: Nexus Mods

While you could switch to another savegame to play your khajiit archer for a while, Project Proteus lets you import your characters into an existing world state—meaning you can switch to a character with their own items, skills, and spells, but keep your current quest progression. NPCs who have died remain dead, items left in storage can be retrieved, and so on. It also lets you edit NPCs and items, even the weather. Some of what Project Proteus makes possible is already doable with Skyrim's console commands and existing mods, but this brings it all together in a single pop-up menu. 

Long Conversations

(Image credit: Bethesda)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Most of Skyrim's conversations are over in a flash. People just aren't that chatty in the frozen north. Every now and then though, you have a longer chin-wag with a greybeard, or one of your fully voiced followers added by mods, and suddenly half a day's gone by. With this mod, time slows down while you're talking so you don't lose hours because you initiated the wrong convo.

No NPC Greetings

(Image credit: Bethesda)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Sick of NPCs repeating the same catchphrase from across the street every time they see you? Sick of guards commenting on your best skills, which they somehow know all about just by looking at you—even Sneak? This mod has a few options for fixing the issue, whether you want to reduce the distance these barks trigger at, or get rid of them altogether.

Simply Knock

Download from: Nexus Mods

One of those small mods that just makes sense. Created by Chesko, author of Frostfall, this mod gives players the ability to knock on locked doors instead of having to break and enter. Someone might answer the door, or you can convince them to open up with your Speech skills. Customize options through MCM. 

Convenient Horses

(Image credit: Alek)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Basically, it makes horses a million times better. Your followers can ride them, and fight while riding. You can conduct conversations and loot while on horseback. There are a variety of new saddles and armor types. Dismounting is quicker and automatically draws your weapon. You can auto-mount horses when they're called, and even dictate their AI in combat.

Realistic Humanoid Movement Speed

(Image credit: Bethesda)

Download from: Nexus Mods

Sick of walking like a turtle and sprinting like a cheetah? This mod fixes the problem. Your movement speed is adjusted to more reasonable levels, from a brisk walk that lets you keep up with NPCs, to slower run speeds that make it challenging to escape from that cranky troll. Also eliminates "skating" from sneak running. 

The Choice is Yours

Download from: Nexus Mods

Lets you be way more in charge of what quests you want to take on. Stops random auto-quest greetings from NPCs, stops books from giving auto-quests, and lets you customize when they want to see certain quests become available. Full MCM support. Optimal experience paired with Timing Is Everything.

Table of Contents

Page 1: Getting started - How to install mods, patches, interface, and textures
Page 2: Content mods - quests, characters, creatures, and places
Page 3: Gameplay mods - weapons, skills, systems, and tweaks

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