Best Mods of 2016

Check out our picks for some of the best mods of 2016. 

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Mods are one of the best parts of being a PC gamer. Not only can they fix issues with a base game, but they can also completely change the way they're played. This year was a great one for mods, especially Star Trek ones.

Although we've chosen these six, we don't want to understate the talent and perseverance that building any mod for PC takes. These are a few of our personal favorites, but there's plenty more out there that offer just as excellent an experience as these.


Brutal Doom 64 (Doom II)

If you're someone constantly in the search for more gibs, Brutal Doom 64 delivers. Doom 64 for the Nintendo 64 was a direct sequel to Doom 2, and fan theory places it as the prequel to Doom (2016). Unfortunately, the adventure didn't make it to PC until 2003 when Samuel Villarreal ripped the textures, sprites, and sounds from Doom 64 and put them into the Doomsday engine to create Doom 64 Absolution TC.

The Doomsday engine is now obsolete, being replaced by GZDoom and Zandronum. Because of this, the makers of Brutal Doom 64 have recreated Doom 64 from scratch for these two engines, while adding a huge amount of new functionality and graphical improvements. It still has the aesthetic of Doom 2, but the controls, blood splatter, and gameplay feel much more modern. For a classic Doom experience, nothing beats Brutal Doom 64, and all you need is a Doom 2 (or Final Doom) WAD to play it.

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Enderal (The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim)

Enderal is a total game modification on a ridiculous level. This mod offers an entirely new world to explore comparable in detail and scope with Skyrim's own. Enderal is voice acted, has a new skill system and combat, experience system, and survival mechanics overhauls.

Enderal is basically like getting another full Elder Scrolls title for free. Even though Enderal is complete, the modders behind it are planning new DLC down the road for the mod, so there'll be ever more to do in the mod soon. If you own a copy of The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim (no DLC required), do yourself a favor and grab Enderal. It's one of the most polished and ambitious mods I've ever seen, and it's a real testament to the modding community's passion.

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Fallout 1.5: Resurrection (Fallout 2)

While the Bethesda entries in the Fallout series have spread the popularity of the franchise name into the powerhouse it is today, some gamers long for the days of Fallout and Fallout 2. Fallout 1.5: Resurrection seeks to sate this desire by offering a full adventure in the vein of the original Fallout.

The mod's authors wish to convey the atmosphere of hopelessness that plagued the landscape of the wastelands of Fallout. They've done a great job of doing so in this completely original story set in the land once known as New Mexico. I don't want to spoil the story, but it's spot on when it comes to classic Fallout storytelling and lore-building. Playing Fallout 1.5: Resurrection takes me back to when I first played Fallout almost 20 years ago and packs a punch that the newer Fallout titles just can't quite grasp.

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Star Trek Armada III: The Final Frontier (Sins of a Solar Empire: Rebellion)

Any fans of Star Trek's gaming IPs during the days of Interplay and Activision can tell you that there hasn't been an official Star Trek game worth a damn since Star Trek Bridge Commander came out in 2002 (Legacy was okay with mods). Luckily there's been quite a few total conversion mods that have made some great games into the Star Trek experiences we wish we could have had from the officially licensed games.

Star Trek Armada III: The Final Frontier is the culmination of over six years of mod making. The Final Frontier is the last version of the Armada III mod to be released, with the team marking the mod as being complete. Few mods receive this much attention and care, and the result is that Star Trek Armada III turns Sins of a Solar Empire: Rebellion into a title that seems like it was built from the start to be a Star Trek game.

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Star Trek: Continuum Remastered (Homeworld: Remastered)

While Star Trek Armada III gives you more of an empire-building approach, the Star Trek: Continuum Mod for Homeworld: Remastered focuses on fleet composition and tactics. Though you have to collect resources, for the most part, your focal point will be massing your fleet and outmaneuvering the enemy.

Star Trek: Continuum features all the big players of the Alpha and Beta Quadrants, and allows play with ships and equipment from the Enterprise, TOS, TMP, and TNG eras of Star Trek. When it comes to a Star Trek fleet combat experience, few games can compare to this mod.

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Seven Kingdoms: Total War (Total War: Attila)

While the Game of Thrones mod for Crusader King 2 is probably the best political simulator of George R. R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire universe, Seven Kingdoms: Total War is shaping up to be the most faithful to the visceral side of the series. Featuring representation from all seven kingdoms of Westeros and the major houses that inhabit them, this mod is perfect for recreating the battles from the books or TV show or matching up two armies for your own version of the Red Wedding.

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Those were just some of our favorite mods of 2016. We know there are a ton more out there that came out this year that are just as high quality and impressive. We commend the people who give away so much of their time and talent to give various game communities something to add replay value and extra awesomeness. Let us know what some of your favorite mods of 2016 were so we can download them.

Contributing Editor
From The Chatty
  • reply
    December 27, 2016 3:00 PM

    Jason Faulkner posted a new article, Best Mods of 2016

    • reply
      December 27, 2016 3:13 PM

      dognose wins again!

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      December 27, 2016 6:31 PM

      I would be falling down on the job (as resident guy who won't shut up about Quake) if I didn't mention two of my favorite Quake mod releases this year.

      *** "Dimension of the Past" (DOPA)

      DOPA was released on Quake's 20th anniversary by Machine Games (the devs behind the new Wolfenstein) and Bethesda as the (official?) "fifth episode for Quake". However it's really just a labor of love by one guy who works there. Very classic-Quake.

      This could have turned out as some slipshod marketing exercise, but actually it is damn good. For one thing, the classic Quake monsters are a little hard to use well as a mapper; you've got to place them in conjunction with the shape of the combat space to make fights interesting, and DOPA nails this. The levels are also fun to explore without being confusing, a very nice use of verticality and interconnectedness without becoming maze-like.

      *** "Arcane Dimensions" (AD)

      The AD release this year is actually an update to the existing mod (from Dec 2015), but I'ma mention it anyway. AD is almost the opposite of DOPA, full of new monsters, new weapons and effects, and huge sprawling super-detailed maps. It's made by a bunch of Quake community folks working together on everything from the mapping to the game code to new build tools.

      Like DOPA this one dodged a bullet too; it could have been a sloppy "everything but the kitchen sink" mod, but instead it's a high-quality release with a fairly consistent art direction that pushes Quake in a bit more of a fantasy direction.

      You can see several AD screenshots in the twitter feed https://twitter.com/SimsOCallaghan

      =====

      These (and a lot more) can be found at https://www.quaddicted.com/reviews/ ... if you're getting AD from there, make sure you get AD 1.5 and then also get the patch from http://www.simonoc.com/files/ad/ad_v1_50patch1.zip

      Or if you want an easy way to install these you can try the batch files here: http://www.shacknews.com/chatty?id=35795395#item_35795395

      (You do need to own Quake to play these!)

      • reply
        December 27, 2016 8:44 PM

        I'll have to give these a try. Thanks for putting them out there!

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      December 27, 2016 7:01 PM

      Call of Chernobyl deserves to be on this list. It's a free-play, survival or story based "RPG Lite" total mod of all three S.T.A.L.K.E.R. games using the Call of Pripyat engine and assets from all of them, plus the "cut maps" and a couple of new ones.
      The devs just added a few new features, one of which is "Azazel mode" where when you die in story mode your 'spirit' inhabits another random npc somewhere (you keep your rank and experience, but not the stuff you were carrying).

      There are even "official" add-ons and mods for the mod. :)

      And it's not even just a game, it's also a development kit for your own mods, if you're interested in that sort of thing. :D

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        December 27, 2016 7:02 PM

        Link: http://www.moddb.com/mods/call-of-chernobyl I forgot that bit!

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        December 27, 2016 8:43 PM

        I always wanted to give the S.T.A.L.K.E.R. series a try. Is Call of Chernobyl a good place to start or should I try one of the base games first?

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        December 27, 2016 8:48 PM

        I'll have to check this out. I followed and tinkered with the peoples soup mods for a long, long time, and this sounds like it has similar goals.

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