Fallout New Vegas Female Body Modsl Updated ^new^ [2026 Release]

You cannot run any updated female body mod without . The 2025 update adds 47 new bones for weapon holstering, walking breasts, and moving buttocks. It also removes the 10,000-poly limit that caused crashes on older skeleton nifs.

Type 3 and Type 6 are dead. Long live Type 4. The original Type 4 (by DIMONIZED ) was a high-poly upgrade from Type 3. The Remastered version cleans up the vertex weighting, adds a 12,000-poly hand mesh, and fixes the infamous "broken wrist seam."

Let’s be honest: not everyone wants realism. TCM is for players who want their Courier to look like a pin-up model who also happens to punch deathclaws to death. It features exaggerated hourglass proportions—tiny waist, wide hips, and a very large bust. fallout new vegas female body modsl updated

Happy modding, wastelanders. And remember: Patrolling the Mojave almost makes you wish for a nuclear winter... or at least a better framerate. Let us know in the comments on Nexus Mods or the FNV Modding subreddit.

For years, T6M (Type 6M) ruled the roost. Pottery is its spiritual successor, built from the ground up for the 2020s. This body features realistic proportions—no more grapefruit-sized breasts on a size-0 waist. It emphasizes musculature and sinew, fitting the lore of a wasteland survivor who carries three shotguns and a sack of legion ears. You cannot run any updated female body mod without

Start with and B42 Physics , add the NVR textures , and never look back. Your Courier will finally look like they actually belong in the year 2281—scarred, muscular, beautiful, and ready to flip a coin with the Legion.

By: The Courier’s Modding Desk

In the Mojave Wasteland, survival is about more than just DT (Damage Threshold) and rad resistance. For many players, it’s also about aesthetics. Released in 2010, Fallout: New Vegas remains a titan of the RPG genre, but let’s be honest: the vanilla character models have not aged well. The stiff, barbie-doll-like proportions and low-poly meshes look particularly dated on modern high-resolution monitors.