Clean Slate -v1.1.0- -mugwump- -
We have all been there. You sit down for a relaxing evening of your favorite deep simulation game. You install two new mods. You load your save. Red errors flood the console. Your colonists stand idle. The animals are on fire for no reason. The autosave from five minutes ago is also corrupted.
You rage. You quit. You uninstall everything.
Clean Slate -v1.1.0- -mugwump- is the antidote to that cycle. It does not promise perfection. It promises neutrality. It promises a fresh start. And in the chaotic world of modded gaming, neutrality is the rarest and most valuable resource of all.
Whether you are a builder, a breaker, a storyteller, or a compulsive min-maxer, this mod asks nothing of you except this: let it sit between the chaos and you. Let it be the fence. Let it be the mugwump. Clean Slate -v1.1.0- -mugwump-
| Feature | Clean Slate v1.0 | CCleaner | BleachBit | Clean Slate -v1.1.0- -mugwump- | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Selective neutrality | No | No | No | Yes (M.A.L.) | | Rollbackable resets | No | No | No | Yes | | Platform-agnostic | Windows only | Windows/macOS | Linux/Windows | Windows/macOS/Linux | | Behavioral learning | No | No | No | 3-session heuristic | | “Mugwump” mode | — | — | — | Native |
As the table shows, no other utility offers a neutral, learning-based reset. Most remain scorched-earth tools. Clean Slate -v1.1.0- -mugwump- is the first to ask, “What if we only delete what you genuinely don’t need?”
Version 1.1.0 is not a minor patch. It represents over 400 hours of refactoring. Here are the critical changes that make Clean Slate -v1.1.0- -mugwump- stand apart from its predecessors. We have all been there
In the lexicon of digital existence, few phrases carry as much paradoxical weight as "Clean Slate." It promises absolute origin—a world without prior state, a memory wiped clean of corruption, trauma, or error. Yet, when appended with the cold precision of -v1.1.0- and the anarchic, almost whimsical suffix -mugwump-, the phrase mutates. It ceases to be a simple tool and becomes a manifesto.
Clean Slate -v1.1.0- -mugwump- is not a product you can download from a tidy App Store. It is a thought experiment, a patch note for the soul, and a critique of incrementalism. It asks a terrifying question: What if you could revert your reality to commit 0—but keep the wisdom gained from every subsequent failure?
This article dissects the three components of this artifact: the Clean Slate (the desire for tabula rasa), the v1.1.0 (the lie of the finished product), and the mugwump (the necessary traitor to all sides). You load your save
Installing Clean Slate -v1.1.0- -mugwump- is straightforward, but the initial calibration requires patience.
The original Clean Slate (v1.0) launched six months ago as a lightweight memory scrubber and preference resetter. It was effective but rigid. Users complained that a full reset was often too totalitarian—a thermonuclear option for what were often minor conflicts.
Enter -v1.1.0- . The development team, operating under a cryptic manifesto, introduced the concept of the "Mugwump." Historically, a mugwump is a person who remains aloof or independent, especially in politics. In the context of Clean Slate, a Mugwump refers to a selective neutrality engine—a set of algorithms that decide what to erase and what to preserve based on behavioral patterns rather than binary rules.
Thus, Clean Slate -v1.1.0- -mugwump- is not merely an update; it is a paradigm shift from "reset everything" to "reset intelligently."
| Flag | Description |
|------|-------------|
| --target <path> | Directory or file to clean (required). |
| --backup | Create backup before deletion. |
| --exclude <pattern> | Skip files matching pattern (supports *, ?). |
| --dry-run | List affected items without deleting. |
| --force | Suppress confirmation prompts. |
| --log-level <debug/info/warning> | Control verbosity. |