Forum Discussion
HI @farmgal123 You'll need to do a 50-50, unfortunately, if the mod lists don't help identify known issues that you have there. This means organizing the files there into bite-size batches and testing one batch at a time (include files mods are dependent on, typically a core or injector mod). For each test, delete the file called localthumbcache, then put only that batch in Mods. If your game behaves as you expect, set that batch aside as "cleared" and delete localthumbcache again. If it doesn't behave as you expect, take out half the batch and see if you're closer to finding the culprit. Remember to delete localthumbcache each time. You'll find some 50-50 method tutorials online too. Once you isolate the file, you can go find out if there's an updated version.
If you've got a lot of content, consider batching by creator. You might also start with stuff you acquired more recently.
- luthienrising2 years agoHero+
Hi @littlealiylee. I'm not sure what you tried or where you're looking for your mods, but for starters, if you've got something like OneDrive or iCloud syncing Documents, unsync the Electronic Arts folder. These syncing programs break Sims 4. After that, head to How to Use Mods/CC to make sure you're set up right.