The different stone colour wouldn't bother me. It's natural that stone interiors darken because of the soot from the hearths, or the exterior being bleached by the sun or altered in any way by the weather, pollen, dirt and what not.
The ladder is indeed an odd choice. If it led to an attic, that would be normal, but for another regular floor, it's weird.
Zodiarkslayer wrote: »You know, its not uncommon for real houses to have staircases outside ...
I think the ladder was only added for convenience.
Whoever designed that house probably wanted to avoid negative feedback by the community for seperating upper and lower floor.
I've rented out the downstairs to Quenyas. He wanted somewhere quiet, the camp site wasn't working out. Pays well, good tenant.
It's the texture and size and shape of the blocks as well as the colour that differs outside to in. Outside is limestone, smooth, large blocks. Inside is not.
Are the walls two blocks thick? It's not cold in Auridon? And the doorway isn't that deep to indicate a double thick wall?
It makes no sense the inside of the stone walls isn't the same stone, cut, and size, as the outside of the stone walls.
What bothers me is that if you just move a tiny bit down the cliff on the right, your character immediately dies. I understand that they have to keep us from leaving the plot, but dying when jumping down only half a meter or 1.6 ft seems ridiculous. I would have prefered them to place a fence there, or bushes (that's probably what I will place there now); probably even an invisible wall would have been better.
I'm not bothered by the clutter from the world boss at all, btw (as I've seen people complaining about that). Actually I'd find it even more interesting if the world boss was visible, even if there is no way of interacting. I always enjoyed looking at the necromancer's altar down the hill from Lakeview Manor in Skyrim
freespirit wrote: »
Either the stones are totally different shapes or the colour is just wrong, I've given up for the night, if anyone has any luck please let me know! 🤯
freespirit wrote: »
Either the stones are totally different shapes or the colour is just wrong, I've given up for the night, if anyone has any luck please let me know! 🤯
I played around with using bookshelves, and it looked alright.
ESO_player123 wrote: »
So not the point. If I, or anybody is paying out money, it should be for content/features not cosmetics, and certainly not just for access to a lorebook.
Except there's plenty of people buying it because they think the house is cute. I didn't even realize it came with a lorebook and I bought it because it was cute.
ESO_player123 wrote: »
So not the point. If I, or anybody is paying out money, it should be for content/features not cosmetics, and certainly not just for access to a lorebook.
but with Home Tours you can go to dozens, if not hundreds, of different Seabloom Villas to read the new book.
You do not have to pay to read it.
And housing is content, not cosmetics. cosmetics are appearance collectibles.
ESO_player123 wrote: »
So not the point. If I, or anybody is paying out money, it should be for content/features not cosmetics, and certainly not just for access to a lorebook.
but with Home Tours you can go to dozens, if not hundreds, of different Seabloom Villas to read the new book.
You do not have to pay to read it.
And housing is content, not cosmetics. cosmetics are appearance collectibles.
Somebody else does have to pay. The solution should be to make the book readable in the preview house.
ESO_player123 wrote: »
So not the point. If I, or anybody is paying out money, it should be for content/features not cosmetics, and certainly not just for access to a lorebook.
but with Home Tours you can go to dozens, if not hundreds, of different Seabloom Villas to read the new book.
You do not have to pay to read it.
And housing is content, not cosmetics. cosmetics are appearance collectibles.
Somebody else does have to pay. The solution should be to make the book readable in the preview house.
What bothers me is that if you just move a tiny bit down the cliff on the right, your character immediately dies. I understand that they have to keep us from leaving the plot, but dying when jumping down only half a meter or 1.6 ft seems ridiculous. I would have prefered them to place a fence there, or bushes (that's probably what I will place there now); probably even an invisible wall would have been better.
I'm not bothered by the clutter from the world boss at all, btw (as I've seen people complaining about that). Actually I'd find it even more interesting if the world boss was visible, even if there is no way of interacting. I always enjoyed looking at the necromancer's altar down the hill from Lakeview Manor in Skyrim
katanagirl1 wrote: »I assumed they used a ladder because the house is just too small for a staircase. It takes up too much room.
katanagirl1 wrote: »I assumed they used a ladder because the house is just too small for a staircase. It takes up too much room.
That would call for a narrow spiral staircase, either made of cast iron or maybe mahogany. Would look good in the pseudo-gothic Alinor architecture and furniture style. They could even reuse the pattern from the windows.
ESO_player123 wrote: »katanagirl1 wrote: »I assumed they used a ladder because the house is just too small for a staircase. It takes up too much room.
That would call for a narrow spiral staircase, either made of cast iron or maybe mahogany. Would look good in the pseudo-gothic Alinor architecture and furniture style. They could even reuse the pattern from the windows.
That would be really cool, but only if we did not have to actually climb it (running up that staircase would be a nightmare). If we could just click on it like we now do on the ladder, that I think would be a perfect solution.
ESO_player123 wrote: »That would be really cool, but only if we did not have to actually climb it (running up that staircase would be a nightmare). If we could just click on it like we now do on the ladder, that I think would be a perfect solution.
The different stone colour wouldn't bother me. It's natural that stone interiors darken because of the soot from the hearths, or the exterior being bleached by the sun or altered in any way by the weather, pollen, dirt and what not.
The ladder is indeed an odd choice. If it led to an attic, that would be normal, but for another regular floor, it's weird.
Yes. It's.... an odd choice. Truthfully, had I been designing this house, the fireplace would have been turned 90 degrees to face the door, and the ladder would have been a staircase with a short ell and landing before going up. And no need at that point for a trapdoor....
Elvenheart wrote: »The different stone colour wouldn't bother me. It's natural that stone interiors darken because of the soot from the hearths, or the exterior being bleached by the sun or altered in any way by the weather, pollen, dirt and what not.
The ladder is indeed an odd choice. If it led to an attic, that would be normal, but for another regular floor, it's weird.
Yes. It's.... an odd choice. Truthfully, had I been designing this house, the fireplace would have been turned 90 degrees to face the door, and the ladder would have been a staircase with a short ell and landing before going up. And no need at that point for a trapdoor....
Agreed, just these 2 changes would have made a nice house soooo much better.
Elvenheart wrote: »The different stone colour wouldn't bother me. It's natural that stone interiors darken because of the soot from the hearths, or the exterior being bleached by the sun or altered in any way by the weather, pollen, dirt and what not.
The ladder is indeed an odd choice. If it led to an attic, that would be normal, but for another regular floor, it's weird.
Yes. It's.... an odd choice. Truthfully, had I been designing this house, the fireplace would have been turned 90 degrees to face the door, and the ladder would have been a staircase with a short ell and landing before going up. And no need at that point for a trapdoor....
Agreed, just these 2 changes would have made a nice house soooo much better.
Well, the above idea of a circular stair would be better than a "real staircase" because of space. C'mon ZOS.... dooo EEEET!
SilverBride wrote: »I would have preferred a small portal like in Khelesan'rhun to this setup.
ElderSmitter wrote: »I bought this starter pack and never received it. How do we claim it? Thanks!