Lord Xanhorn wrote: »As the central feature of almost every single DLC and now the Morrowind xpac, does anyone actually enjoy questing? I would think that most people are like me and just skip the dialogue and move to the objective that the all knowing marker tells me to go to. There's no choice, consequence, or impact to any of my actions and listening to dialogue for 5 minutes at a time seems tedious and keeps me away from what I really want to be doing which is killing things.
lordrichter wrote: »Skyrim had some interesting plot lines that for some reason led nowhere, so we were left with a bunch of open endings that were not touched upon by the DLCs. I don't understand why they did that.
I am not sure what endings you are referring to, but game development only goes so far, and anything outside of that is "don't care". The whole game is a facade. Think of it like a movie set. They only build the "sets" to meet the immediate needs of the story they are telling. Beyond that, they don't care.
illuminousflux wrote: »Yeah, I love questing. I try my best not to skip through them, but sometimes I still do through the side quests. I recommend at least paying attention to all the main quests for each faction and dlc.
LOL! I did the main quest, and made sure I killed the Prophet when I did it.lordrichter wrote: »The main reason in ESO to do the main quest is to get the Prophet to stop appearing everywhere.
More accurate, game is designed to charter to various play styles: lots of quests, dungeons, raids, pvp, crafting.Solid_Metal wrote: »Lord Xanhorn wrote: »As the central feature of almost every single DLC and now the Morrowind xpac, does anyone actually enjoy questing? I would think that most people are like me and just skip the dialogue and move to the objective that the all knowing marker tells me to go to. There's no choice, consequence, or impact to any of my actions and listening to dialogue for 5 minutes at a time seems tedious and keeps me away from what I really want to be doing which is killing things.
"i don't playing like this, therefore people should be playing exactly like me"
seriously?
PelinalWhitestrake wrote: »I love questing so much I don't even skip dialogue. Gotta hear all that voice acting.
Solid_Metal wrote: »Lord Xanhorn wrote: »As the central feature of almost every single DLC and now the Morrowind xpac, does anyone actually enjoy questing? I would think that most people are like me and just skip the dialogue and move to the objective that the all knowing marker tells me to go to. There's no choice, consequence, or impact to any of my actions and listening to dialogue for 5 minutes at a time seems tedious and keeps me away from what I really want to be doing which is killing things.
"i don't playing like this, therefore people should be playing exactly like me"
seriously?
That's true, what you said was more "I don't play like this, therefore I don't think other people do either", which is different.Lord Xanhorn wrote: »Solid_Metal wrote: »Lord Xanhorn wrote: »As the central feature of almost every single DLC and now the Morrowind xpac, does anyone actually enjoy questing? I would think that most people are like me and just skip the dialogue and move to the objective that the all knowing marker tells me to go to. There's no choice, consequence, or impact to any of my actions and listening to dialogue for 5 minutes at a time seems tedious and keeps me away from what I really want to be doing which is killing things.
"i don't playing like this, therefore people should be playing exactly like me"
seriously?
While I recognize your clear attempt to troll me, I will not bite sir. Everyone knows that's not what I said. Good try though.
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Caius Drusus Imperial DK (DC) Bragg Ironhand Orc Temp (DC) Neesha Stalks-Shadows Argonian NB (EP) Falidir Altmer Sorcr (AD) J'zharka Khajiit NB (AD) |
Isabeau Runeseer Breton Sorc (DC) Fevassa Dunmer DK (EP) Manut Redguard Temp (AD) Tylera the Summoner Altmer Sorc (EP) Svari Snake-Blood Nord DK (AD) |
Ashlyn D'Elyse Breton NB (EP) Filindria Bosmer Temp (DC) Vigbjorn the Wanderer Nord Warden (EP) Hrokki Winterborn Breton Warden (DC) Basks-in-the-Sunshine Argonian Temp |
That's true, what you said was more "I don't play like this, therefore I don't think other people do either", which is different.
Yeah, which is pretty different from if you had been saying that other people should only play the way you do.Lord Xanhorn wrote: »That's true, what you said was more "I don't play like this, therefore I don't think other people do either", which is different.
Close but its more like "I don't play like this and from my experience of talking to other friends/guildies, I would guess a majority of others don't either. Is that right?" I mean the title is a question and not a declarative statement.
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Caius Drusus Imperial DK (DC) Bragg Ironhand Orc Temp (DC) Neesha Stalks-Shadows Argonian NB (EP) Falidir Altmer Sorcr (AD) J'zharka Khajiit NB (AD) |
Isabeau Runeseer Breton Sorc (DC) Fevassa Dunmer DK (EP) Manut Redguard Temp (AD) Tylera the Summoner Altmer Sorc (EP) Svari Snake-Blood Nord DK (AD) |
Ashlyn D'Elyse Breton NB (EP) Filindria Bosmer Temp (DC) Vigbjorn the Wanderer Nord Warden (EP) Hrokki Winterborn Breton Warden (DC) Basks-in-the-Sunshine Argonian Temp |
TLDR: ESO has a wonderful game lore and it's a big loss not to enjoy it
I'm always very sad to see instant team mates just clicking through the dialogs - one of the best features elevating ESO above the rest of the MMOs is that fantastically deep and beautifully crafted world lore which gives the whole Elder Scrolls taste.
So the quests
I spent my first 6 months of ESO literally playing it as a single player RPG with a hint of coop and enjoyed it very much. As I still do - there are many more quests all around Tamriel I haven't even discovered, just started the Dominion-line and find it again exciting.
It's not easy to cover up the schematics of the classic MMO quest types: bring a few of this, kill a few of that and then that but ESO does a magical job: with all the layered structures in the storylines (the main, the guilds, the zones, the side quests, etc.) and those well chosen points where these meet each other makes the whole questing epic in my book.
The dialogs are fantastic (and ESO have all dialogs spoken, not just a wall of text in a bubble and a funny beep), and not just the content but the actors giving their voices to these meticulously crafted character-masterpieces: I LOVE THEM! Sir Cadwell, Molag Bal, Vanus Galerion, the Prohpet, all the companions and how they tease each other it's just marvellous, I can't stop playing through just the main quests all the time with a new character just to hear these absolutely artistic pieces of characterizing.
The variety ESO can wrap the same few quest types into so many different contexts and seemingly different ways is fascinating to me. Never have seen this in any other MMOs. I played quite a few and most became dull and repetitive just because the devs didn't go for the extra mile and left their stories bare and unfurnished, they lacked in those tiny little wonders which made me put the effort into them to go on and play them along.
So yes, for me questing is great fun, ESO is super-immersive with plenty of epic mementos in the quests. Just like I love to re-watch some movies, re-read books I'm really happy to go over quests again and again with different characters. ESO has a rich game lore and each and every play through adds some more to it even if I already know what's going on. Enough content for years to come for me.
This game can only sing if the player drops all the previously conditioned attitudes and behaviour brought over from WOW or other earlier classics. I'm really sad to see new players grinding like hell to chase levels, numbers and being stressed about an imaginary end-game at level 5. They are the ones turning this truly deep storyline and lore to a clickfest while they are not certain why they don't enjoy ESO. Ok, that's one way to go but the chance to enjoy this game is there, it just needs a different approach.
MrDenimChicken wrote: »(WOW didnt do *** for questing, yet was the most played MMO ever)
MrDenimChicken wrote: »People who actually listen to all of the quests in this game must be ridiculously easy to entertain.
yes the quests in this game are better than most if not all other mmo's, but that is because MMO's don't prioritize questing plots. The gameplay is MUCH more important for players to stay for a long time. (WOW didnt do *** for questing, yet was the most played MMO ever)
This game puts more emphasis on questing, like as if it wants to be a decent single player RPG. And that's pretty much how the gameplay feels like during leveling.
However, in my opinion, about 60-70% of the quests in this game are pretty half assed compared to single player RPG's, and they start to feel like copy and pastes of each other in terms of general plot after several hours. 20% are okay and I'll listen to them, and 10% are actually really good.
and unfortunately, you get pretty much NO other dialogue options in most quests, and your responses don't matter and don't lead to a different line of dialogue from the NPC. So it doesn't matter if you listen, as long as you just press A or 1 over and over, the same *** will happen.
Fortunately, the DLC zones like Orsinium and Thieve's guild have much better questing than the base game. If Zenimax put the same effort into the base game zones as they did the DLC zones, than this game would have been much better received upon release.
The_Conquerer wrote: »quests on ESO are watered down compared to Skyrim and oblivion. You're usually doing the same thing in every quest and most of the concepts they add to all quests are copied and pasted from previous quests. As for dialogue i liked the main harborage quests the first time around after that and doing Cadwells almanac I noticed that many of the voices are portaryed by the same voice actor it makes it feel very repetitive.
Lord Xanhorn wrote: »As the central feature of almost every single DLC and now the Morrowind xpac, does anyone actually enjoy questing? I would think that most people are like me and just skip the dialogue and move to the objective that the all knowing marker tells me to go to. There's no choice, consequence, or impact to any of my actions and listening to dialogue for 5 minutes at a time seems tedious and keeps me away from what I really want to be doing which is killing things.
Lord Xanhorn wrote: »As the central feature of almost every single DLC and now the Morrowind xpac, does anyone actually enjoy questing? I would think that most people are like me and just skip the dialogue and move to the objective that the all knowing marker tells me to go to. There's no choice, consequence, or impact to any of my actions and listening to dialogue for 5 minutes at a time seems tedious and keeps me away from what I really want to be doing which is killing things.
I take it, when someone gifts you a book, you skip the reading and move to the objective... using it as a doorstop, right?