

Textures and Meshes are replaced or added to their appropriate folders. So, once you find where Steam has placed the "DATA" folder, modding the rest is the same as modding it as if it was a disc copy. In Fallout 3, your mods have to be placed in a load order in fact.

exe ( Fallout 3 Mod Manager) to function. Now, like Dragon Age, Elder Scrolls and Fallout 3 require (or at least prefer) a mod. My copies of those are disc based (I had a BestBuy gift card) and they each have mod resources on the Nexus sites, ElderScrollsNexus and Fallout3Nexus. Now I mention this because I also have very modded versions of Bethesda's Elder Scrolls IV and Fallout 3. As such, it's my most favorite game ever. I've added a bunch of different changes to make the game perfect for my tastes and play style.

I have a Steam copy of Dragon Age Origins and it's pretty modded out from DragonAgeNexus.
