The Forgotten City mod for Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim - Mod DB. However their place after the exile is not Blue Palace anymore the new private quarters in Understone Keep will be their new home. Things that seem to have inspired the designs of #skyrim. The Forgotten City is a quest mod for The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim and The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim Special Edition. I'm … Face towards the abandoned palace from the center of town. Mods should be no different if they're quality mods.Skyrim forget me not abandoned palace Showing 1-15 of 20 comments. It might kill you to realize, but even the most passionate developers, corporate and indie, still work for money. As much as I hate using that term because it gets thrown around way too much, that fits many people perfectly. Demanding someone's effort be solely free because you want it to be free is self-entitlement. In other words, "if you won't give it to me for free, then don't do it at all". "If you don't want to donate your time to the system, then don't".
Expansions and overhauls should be charging 10-20.
Added spells, should be cheap but not free (couple bucks maybe). Especially when it comes to the bigger ones that have a clear amount of time and effort placed into them. So yes, their argument is nothing but "I'm entitled to free stuff because I want free stuff." There isn't a single legitimate argument for mods to be free.
By their logic, all games should be free because they should be done solely for passion and money shouldn't be important. If a person doesn't want to pay someone for their work simply because "it should be free", then that person is a very selfish and naive individual. It worked for 30+ years because there wasn't a system in place to make it possible for them to consistently get paid for their work. Paying for the good ones will result in more good mods. Sure, there are a lot of great mods but there are very few in comparison to the number of crap ones. I'm not insulting the community, I'm criticizing their stance.