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The last eight years were fun, but I ran out of space while trying to compile a project, and, well, your number came up. I'm sorry...

I need a bigger SSD. I launched Visual Studio (which I rarely use so it only had the default extensions installed) to clone and build the new Windows Terminal to see what it's like. Had to download over 10GB of extensions and features first, and then compiling the project ate up every last byte of remaining space.

Comments
  • 4
    @M1sf3t To be fair, I ended up reaching the point with the sheer number of mods I had installed where it would crash before I could even leave Helgen... so a reinstall was needed anyway.

    I freed up 64GB by uninstalling it and deleting the mods. That's ridiculous.
  • 4
    @M1sf3t that's the price I pay for 4k textures lol.
  • 4
    F 🙁
  • 0
    @M1sf3t Mods make it last. Like all of Bethesda's games, Skyrim is ridiculously moddable. New quests, new locations, better textures, redesigned characters, new lore, and all sorts of other things can combine to make the entire game feel fresh and new every time you play it. Plus Skyrim is a stupidly-huge game to begin with.
  • 1
    Rest in peace sweet prince.. you'll be back in 20 minutes
  • 0
    @M1sf3t Depending on what qualifies as a "decent machine" you may be able to afford it now. Especially since tech isn't advancing nearly as fast as it used to. My whole computer is using old components from a few years ago and still running everything fine. My CPU is six years old and I only recently started to think about replacing it.
  • 0
    <old man rant>back in my day games fit on a floppy disk or two... these new fangled things with their 4k textures taking up a couple of times more space than an average hard drive 20 years ago... grumbly grumble...</old man rant>
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