If u know HEX you can edit the same things as on MODEL EDIT...
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i use them both for my mods xD
depends on what kinda mod your making
some things you can only do in Model Edit, and you can't do via hex edit
That's like comparing apples to oranges.
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Why the hell would you hardcode something when you can do the way it's meant to be done...
Originally Posted by leoisso
Model:
-Easier than Hex
-MODEL SUX
Models being 'SUX' is because my converter isn't perfect, if you get original lta's there are no problems.
Originally Posted by supercarz1991
depends on what kinda mod your making
some things you can only do in Model Edit, and you can't do via hex edit
You can do anything and more in hex than you can with ModelEdit, you just need to know what the hex means. It is just that most people only know what a few bytes mean, so they are limited to only being able to do a few things.
Originally Posted by ᴺᴼᴼᴮ
That's like comparing apples to oranges.
I'd say its more like, using a 386 with dos vs a i7 with windows 7. Or perhaps assembly to VB. You can do the same stuff, but VB is going to take 10 lines vs 100/1000+ assembly lines.
I Prefer Model Edit, But Also Hex Edit.....You Can edit the model and hex it....So idk..
I prefer the old HEX editing
hex editing is fun and more pro then normal model way (no offense to those that don't use hex)
Originally Posted by pwnagebeef
hex editing is fun and more pro then normal model way (no offense to those that don't use hex)
Yes, it's true :D
Originally Posted by pwnagebeef
hex editing is fun and more pro then normal model way (no offense to those that don't use hex)
It might be "pro" if there wasn't a a pile of tutorials telling you exactly what to change, or if people actually knew what they the changes were doing because I am pretty sure 90%+ don't know.
everyone has to learn somehow. plus after u learn first time its easy to find out the rest on your own
Originally Posted by pwnagebeef
everyone has to learn somehow. plus after u learn first time its easy to find out the rest on your own
I don't have any (major) issues with the tutorials, or finding the same value 'on your own'.
My issue is considering following step by step guides usually, with video or pictures, showing you exactly what to change 'pro'. Especially when the only thing a lot of people seemed to have learned is that this magic value changes stuff somehow.
Do you know what that value is?
Do you know how/why it affects the model the way it does?