Until Hello Games rolls out more patches to get them ironed out, or if you're playing on a system that barely meets or falls short of recommended specs, try Project Potato. No Man's Sky shipped with a laundry list of performance issues that bog down even the most cutting-edge systems. That ideology informed Blizzard North's Diablo, and it applies to No Man's Sky as well-or at least it should. Fast Actions overhauls interactions that require you to hold a button, letting you click once so you can move on with your life already. HUD elements ruin screenshots, and NoHUD wipes them away, leaving you free to frame perfect shots and share them with your friends or use them to adorn your PC's desktop.
No Man's Sky represents many things to many people, but almost all agree that it's one big Kodak moment.
ShutUp gives you the option to disable some or all audio cues, so you can keep reminders for systems you have a tendency to overlook and silence the more redundant of the bunch.
You can disable audio warnings in No Man's Sky that nag at you when various systems run low, however. Ever wish you could disable the constant beeping that occurs in Zelda games when Link's heart meter plummets to precipitous levels? Well, you can't.