True Facials Mods

CD Projekt Red’s masterpiece had excellent facials at launch, but the modding community felt the player character, V, lacked emotional reactivity during third-person photo mode and specific dialogue branches. Mods like Photorealistic Face and E3 2018 Facial Replication restored "true" facials by unlocking hidden morph targets that were disabled in the final release, adding the grit and vulnerability seen in early trailers.


Here’s a draft write-up for a hypothetical “True Facials Mods” in the context of a video game (e.g., The Sims, Skyrim, or a character customization tool). Since the phrase is ambiguous, I’ve aimed for a neutral, descriptive tone suitable for a modding forum or patch notes. If you meant something else, please clarify.


Mod Title: True Facials – Enhanced Expression & Detail Overhaul
Version: 2.1.0
Compatible with: [Game Name] v1.8+

Overview
“True Facials” replaces the base game’s limited facial animation and texture system with high-resolution, dynamic micro-expressions, sweat, tears, dirt, and makeup that reacts in real time to character actions, health, and environment. true facials mods

Key Features

Installation

Compatibility

Known Issues

Credits
Facial rigging by [Name]; texture work by [Name]; testing by community beta group.

Disclaimer
For mature audiences only (depending on game rating). Not intended to offend; “true facial” refers to fidelity, not adult content. CD Projekt Red’s masterpiece had excellent facials at


Does it succeed in making characters look human? Mostly, yes. There is a risk, however, of creating characters that look too realistic for Skyrim’s slightly cartoonish environment. If you pair True Facials with an ENB that is highly cinematic, the character may look like a real-life actor superimposed into a video game. Some users prefer the "stylized" look of mods like Hvergelmir's Brows combined with lighter skin mods.

However, for those chasing photorealism, True Facials is currently the gold standard.