ass a fan of both games, I would say yes.
ass a fan of both games, I would say yes.
That's an excellent point. I went through a phase where I downloaded a lot of mods for Morrowind but since so many conflicted with each other and created glitches I gave up on them. But I'm probably missing out on a lot of free content, so maybe I should try it out again. My new PC can handle Skyrim, so maybe I should get the PC version.
Well it really depends - Final Fantasy and the Elder Scrolls are wildly different games. For example the battle system is real-time rather than turn-based, and you level based on actually doing things rather than experience points. Compared to a more structured storyline in an FF game, an Elder Scrolls game is a much more open-ended experience, allowing you to complete hundreds of quests without even touching the main storyline. You can play for hundreds of hours and still have content to experience, and as Loony Bob points out, mods add even more. And in Skyrim there apparently are infinite quests, though I have yet to see how that works. If you're not a fan of open-world games, you may be a bit lost. You'll have to try it out and see what you think.
When I tried Morrowind the first time I was completely lost, and I promptly sold my original copy, but this is when I was much younger and my tastes in games hadn't matured. People without experience in the series can wander around without knowing what to do, and might find the lack of structure daunting.
Give it a go, and see what you think!
Tl;dr
Have you tried riding a horse yet??
Last edited by CimminyCricket; 11-12-2011 at 07:23 PM. Reason: Damn phone i hit t
I've only played it for two hours so far, so I'm probably pretty pre-mature in stating that it seems like a significant jump from Oblivion. I mean, there are tons of lists people make about what's been changed, what's been improved, etc. Those aren't all necessarily wrong, but more a very clinical look at the game. Just experiencing it in action it just feels better than Oblivion, for whatever that is worth. Again, I've only had two hours worth of time with it (my girlfriend just had her first, 'it's only been an hour... wait, it's been three?' moment) but as far as the minute-to-minute experience with, it seems like Bethesda have really brought it.
My perspective: I quite enjoy both Morrowind and Oblivion. They've got their obnoxious issues, yeah, but they still nail their number one goal: letting you play around in a chillin' fantasy world. I was a bit less hot on Fallout 3, which I felt was probably tighter as a game system, but more problematic with bugs that mucked up or even canceled out quests - which are generally meatier than the average ES quest, making the bugs that much more devastating to actually enjoying the game. I booted it up a new file a month or so ago to give Bethesda's last generation of games a spin one more time, and the Sheriff Simms/Mr. Byrne thing went haywire almost immediately.
People throw the 'RPG' phrase around too willy-nilly. It's not a catch-all term the way a lot of people think. FF and ES are vastly different types of games, the commonality being the presence of visible statistics and numbers for the player to muck around with (the 'RPG' part of most are referring to). My advice is to check out some clips on Youtube to see if you'd be into it at all.
Last edited by Flying Arrow; 11-12-2011 at 09:10 PM.
Ahahahahahaha
>alt-tabbing a Steam game
Yeah that one's Gaben's fault.
There was a lot of hype about this game before it came out, but the more I listen to people who have played it, the happier I get that I cancelled my preorder. Not that it is necessarily a bad game, but it does seem as though it isn't living up to the hype. Nor has it bypassed the traditional Bethesda bug-fest.
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I actually think it's an excellent game.
The games looks incredible, imo. If not by realism, certainly by design. Which is why I adored Morrowind.
This game feels even moreso. Never before have I felt a world be so free, so alive, so colorful. The world is alive and you actually get immersed into a culture and a way of living. Watching wolves chase rabbits, walking in on a spouse argument, requesting songs from local bards, the game brings so many little things in that just makes it feel real. You feel less like a player and more like a tourist. Every inch of the world feels like it was crafted customly as opposed to the rather thrown-together Oblivion world.
The game is certainly not without its faults, primarily the god-awful interface. But it does one thing that I truly cannot put into words any other. With Skyrim, you need not to suspend disbelief; the game does it for you.
Er what? I've not seen a single person who has played it give it anything but the most glowing review. This is probably the only time I've seen simplification done properly, in that you don't miss what's gone because you're too busy with the great stuff that is there, just going out and having adventures and getting into wacky trouble and holy trout giants hit hard. I don't know what you've been reading but "The equal of Morrowind", "GOTY", and "This game is awesome" are at the lower end of the praise it's getting.
The more I play the game, the more I like it. Although I'm getting towards the point that I have to start leveling in order to complete some quests, so I guess the proof will be in the next few hours of playing. I've reached nearly every town, now, too. I think I have one more to go. Still undecided about whether I'll go for Imperial Army or Stormcloaks... both have good arguments behind their side and I like to go for the side I feel has the most justification, at least in my first playthrough.
Just starting to fight vampires. I hate vampires. I wish I was fighting dragons instead. I've not had many of them... maybe I need to advance the storyline a bit. I've seen three and beaten two - one flew off into the distance after I heard it. The third I found near an Imperial camp, so had help to beat it. I'm wondering if I can beat one on my own just yet... only one way to find out!
Bow before the mighty Javoo!
I'm alomst 60 hours in, have all enchanted Daedric and Dragonplate armor, and a Daedric sword and bow, with Incinerate and Thunderbolt magic. I somehow got the ability to turn into a werewolf, and have killed four dragons. I can't play for longer than three or fours hours at a time without getting bored with it or annoyed, but for the most part I love it. It's the best modern game I've played for quite a while, even though it feels more sandbox than Oblivion did.
Face
ส็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็็༼ ຈل͜ຈ༽ส้้้้้้้้้้้้้้้้้้้้้้้
200k+ players on Steam on the first day means, "PC gamers love console ports!"
Redeeming features:
1) Nice map
2) Possibility of a mod that makes children murderable
First Elder Scrolls I've enjoyed.
I like there Perk Systerm (Probably inspired by Fallout, though very different in it's set up and Execution), going to Fall Out's superior Lock Picking system, the people look a lot more like people now, and the very first character you meet in the game is awesome.
I'm playing only so often since I don't actually own it, it's my buddies, but I am pleasantly surprised by how enjoyable it is.
Though in a few days it still takes a back seat to Saints Row.
Ahahahahahahahaha I wandered into a Giant camp by accident and Lydia got hit so hard she went sailing into the air and I'm pretty sure she landed somewhere in High Hrothgar
Also holy smurf if you forego fast travel this game is huge.