: Characters like apostrophes and accents no longer appear as boxes; Anniversary Upgrade prompts are properly sized on German, French, and Spanish language versions.

Change the dropdown to

– Updates hundreds of mesh and material files to reduce glow-in-dark lighting effects; fully compatible with 1.10.163 and Next-Gen updates.

Below is a comprehensive compilation of the changes associated with the 1.10.163 era and the subsequent updates that built upon its foundation:

– Install on any device, any number of times.

For years, Update 1.10.163 stood as the definitive, final "pre-next-gen" version of Fallout 4. It became the gold standard baseline for large-scale modding projects, total conversions, and massive mod collections (Wabbitjack lists).

Update 1.10.163 is a footnote in Fallout 4’s patch history—invisible to most, but a crucial reminder of how even minor version bumps can have major consequences for the modding ecosystem. It was the calm before the storm of the Next-Gen Update, and for many PC modders, it was the moment they decided to freeze their game version permanently.

A persistent discussion in the community revolves around whether to downgrade to 1.10.163 or embrace newer versions. Proponents of downgrading point to stability, mod availability, and freedom from Creations telemetry. Opponents argue that F4SE and Address Library have been updated for each Anniversary Edition release, making downgrading unnecessary for most players.

Resolved underlying stability bugs related to Creation Club item deployment in the Commonwealth. The Modding Community Catalyst

The primary reasons players remain fiercely loyal to version 1.10.163 include:

For the average console player, update 1.10.163 passed by without much notice. However, for the PC modding community, it accidentally created a perfect, frozen moment in time. The Fallout 4 Script Extender (F4SE) Barrier

: Tweaked the main game executable ( Fallout4.exe ) to recognize the new content licensing. Why It Became the "Golden Standard" for Modding

This update is emblematic of the "limited time free offer" marketing strategy employed by Bethesda. By releasing the content for free for a limited window, Bethesda incentivized the installation of the patch. However, for the PC modding community, this update was a source of consternation. Unlike traditional mods, Creation Club content is curated and installed via a proprietary interface separate from the standard mod menu. Update 1.10.163 enforced this bifurcation, reinforcing the divide between the "Official" (paid) ecosystem and the "Community" (free) ecosystem.

Unlike major content expansions, Update 1.10.163 was fundamentally a utility and administrative patch. Bethesda designed it to facilitate backend support for the Creation Club—the game's micro-expansion marketplace. Key Adjustments

On December 13, 2017, Bethesda Softworks released Fallout 4 Update 1.10.163 for the PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC platforms. While ostensibly a minor patch intended to support the release of the Creation Club content "Capital Wasteland Mercenaries," this update represents a pivotal moment in the lifecycle of the game. This paper explores how 1.10.163 served as a functional gateway for the "Next-Gen" console features, exposed the growing friction between the modding community and corporate monetization strategies, and highlighted the technical obsolescence of the Creation Engine in the lead-up to Fallout 76 .