The Steam reviews are totally fine, look at MetaCritic, it's a similar rating there.
Critics gave the game 71 / 100 (poor rating for an ES game, worst in the whole series)
Customers gave the game 5.7 / 10 (even worse than Steam)
I think ESO console version gets another round of reviews when it launches but I doubt it will be anywhere beyond 75-79 at best.
ESO just isn't a game that deserves a rating beyond 75, that's it. It's not a bad game but it isn't a great one either.
The Steam reviews are totally fine, look at MetaCritic, it's a similar rating there.
Critics gave the game 71 / 100 (poor rating for an ES game, worst in the whole series)
Customers gave the game 5.7 / 10 (even worse than Steam)
I think ESO console version gets another round of reviews when it launches but I doubt it will be anywhere beyond 75-79 at best.
ESO just isn't a game that deserves a rating beyond 75, that's it. It's not a bad game but it isn't a great one either.
kevlarto_ESO wrote: »Once again good reasons for me to not pay attention to numbers and reviews, like in the past I have played games that were suppose to be awesome, high fan ratings and critics raved they were the best thing since sliced bread, I played them through most of the were terrible, shallow and just not fun, I have played games with less than stellar reviews and found a lot of them of fun and some were bad, but it all comes down to personal taste, I think a lot of the bad reviews on ESO were butt hurt folks over the sub, I like ESO, even with it's issues, it is fun to me, and that's all I care about.
eventide03b14a_ESO wrote: »By other TES games I mean.
- Sandbox.
- No classes. Skill based only.
- A justice system that is more like the other TES games.
- NPCs that have better AI akin to the Radiant AI used in other games.
Those things would be a nice start.
- OK, granted. I'd like that too.
- Um, the only one of TES I-VI that didn't have classes was Skyrim. Some were more restrictive in what class dictated than others, but Skyrim is the only one that wasn't class-based.
- It would be incredibly difficult (at best) to make an MMO justice system that worked more like previous TES justice systems (which were actually pretty different from each other), and which allowed for other players in the system at the same time.
- Again, I'd like that too.
heroofnoneb14_ESO wrote: »Correct me if I'm wrong as well, but with the release of "The Elder Scrolls Online: Tamriel Unlimited", doesn't the change in title, boxing, etc. Also mean the prior reviews will become disassociated with the previous ones? Not to say people won't tie the two together, but it sort of obligates the companies to rereview it. Similar to when AoC went B2P.
kevlarto_ESO wrote: »Once again good reasons for me to not pay attention to numbers and reviews, like in the past I have played games that were suppose to be awesome, high fan ratings and critics raved they were the best thing since sliced bread, I played them through most of the were terrible, shallow and just not fun, I have played games with less than stellar reviews and found a lot of them of fun and some were bad, but it all comes down to personal taste, I think a lot of the bad reviews on ESO were butt hurt folks over the sub, I like ESO, even with it's issues, it is fun to me, and that's all I care about.
Not at all.heroofnoneb14_ESO wrote: »Correct me if I'm wrong as well, but with the release of "The Elder Scrolls Online: Tamriel Unlimited", doesn't the change in title, boxing, etc. Also mean the prior reviews will become disassociated with the previous ones? Not to say people won't tie the two together, but it sort of obligates the companies to rereview it. Similar to when AoC went B2P.
I have to say that just maybe the reason that ESO gets poor ratings on both steam and metacritic is because the game earned those reviews. You can say what you want about time played but it doesn't take long for the games glaring shortcomings to show.
the combat in this game is/was pretty remarkable at realease. What we lacked in itemization and polish we had in promise and foundation.
Then the megaservers (RE: WABBAJACK 1.0) crashed and pvp guilds sat in queues. PvE guilds watched as itemezation lagged, no new content came and 3 months in they said fukit. we can't wait for hours in a queue during primetime to pvp, or sit at endgame amassing gold and flowers.
Game breaking bugs have been introducted or past QA since beta (invulnerability, speed stacking that does not remove, non rendering objects you can wal thru, purge, caltrops vs siege, on, on on)
and Then you toyed with the visual aspects of the client and dropped our fps.
None of the pr staff you hire, or eso live carebear discussions will get past any of that besides in ZoS meetings.
heroofnoneb14_ESO wrote: »Correct me if I'm wrong as well, but with the release of "The Elder Scrolls Online: Tamriel Unlimited", doesn't the change in title, boxing, etc. Also mean the prior reviews will become disassociated with the previous ones? Not to say people won't tie the two together, but it sort of obligates the companies to rereview it. Similar to when AoC went B2P.
utbackpacker911b14_ESO wrote: »
Toyed with the graphics? Yes,they improved them.If it dropped your FPS then you(like me) aren't running a big enough video card,I had to turn it down to High,my FPS went back to 60 and it looks just like it did before they made the IMPROVEMENTS. I plan on adding another video card to be able to get the added PERK of running it on ultra. This is a NON-ISSUE,unless you see your glass half empty!
Actually judged from a MMO standpoint (and I think I can make an educated judgement here since I have played I think any major AAA MMO except for GW 2 in the past 8 years) ESO offers the most freeform and encouraging character progression system so far. Yeah there is a framework of classes, but you can (at least as far as PvE goes) make any class a tank, DD or Healer. Which is pretty awesome in my book.
Just out of curiosity looked up ESO on Steam, wondered why it isn't featured more often on the front page of the store. Currently the game was reviewed by about 1600 people with only 63% of reviews being positive. Most of the negative reviews being ridiculous bullcrap. But still that very low rate of good reviews is one of the reasons why ESO might not be selling as good on Steam as it could be. In general the rate of good reviews actually does influence a lot of customers on steam in their decision. You want at least a mostly positive average. Mixed is the beginning of the bad quality section people basically stay away from on steam unless they can pick it up for under 10$ and in my view ESO does not belong there at all.
The reason why I bring this up now is because ZOS missed an opportunity at steam launch, that every indie developer happily takes, and pays dearly for it now as it seems. Indie Devs usally give out Steam Keys for free to their existing customers upon Steam launch of their game. Amongst other things to make sure people with experience in the game are able to write good and helpful reviews on steam encouraging further people to buy the game. Most of them also do it because it is the right thing to do really. But ZOS made the super smart decision of not doing this. Not enabling their most loyal customers to leave their opinion on steam.
well, if our moderators could just be given steam admin privledges, they could edit up those reviews in no time so things looked better on the forum. 1 millon subs b2p's strong