Cactus316000 wrote: »Oblivion. When I first started playing it, I had never played anything like it. You could go literally anywhere and the music was amazing. The first game I felt truly immersed in.
barney2525 wrote: »Bought skyrim
Never got past character creation because iMHO there was not a decent looking character to be made. Just can't play a game where I can't stand looking at the character.
Sylvermynx wrote: »I love all the TES games, been playing them since Arena released. For Oblivion and Skyrim, you really need body and hair mods....
Sylvermynx wrote: »I love all the TES games, been playing them since Arena released. For Oblivion and Skyrim, you really need body and hair mods....
Yes! there are massive addons available for that things.
Sylvermynx wrote: »Sylvermynx wrote: »I love all the TES games, been playing them since Arena released. For Oblivion and Skyrim, you really need body and hair mods....
Yes! there are massive addons available for that things.
Especially for Oblivion. I couldn't stand the potato heads at all. Skyrim wasn't as bad but there's just so many cool mods for it out there.
Sylvermynx wrote: »I estimate I've spent around 20k hours over the years in TES games.... SO much fun!
Hellmasker wrote: »I got into the series with Daggerfall back in the day... buggy as all hell, but it was still somehow... a wonderful experience. Like a medieval/fantasy sim.. you could really "live" there. Since then I did catch up on all the other games. Did beat Arena, Redguard and Battlespire fairly recently... All the games are good to some extent... or have atleast some redeeming qualities.
As a bonus, I made a pic of my Daggerfall character
jainiadral wrote: »I enjoyed Skyrim but ESO's more my game. Storylines are far more coherent here, and the questing has Skyrim beat by a mile. If it weren't for seeing other players, I could almost imagine this game as the RPG I wanted Skyrim to be.
I like freedom, but Skyrim was a little too free. I like a nice, linear story far more. By the time I finished Skyrim's main story, I'd already forgotten how it began
Sylvermynx wrote: »jainiadral wrote: »I enjoyed Skyrim but ESO's more my game. Storylines are far more coherent here, and the questing has Skyrim beat by a mile. If it weren't for seeing other players, I could almost imagine this game as the RPG I wanted Skyrim to be.
I like freedom, but Skyrim was a little too free. I like a nice, linear story far more. By the time I finished Skyrim's main story, I'd already forgotten how it began
I'm actually not much into the MMO genre. I prefer an open world SPMR game like Skyrim. I did the MQ a couple of times, then I started adding in quest mods. In the last couple of years, I've kept Legacy of the Dragonborn in my load order permanently. Love it! Probably won't do Odyssey unless something changes and ice decides to make it available for SLE - I really dislike SSE (and CC of course).
jainiadral wrote: »Sylvermynx wrote: »jainiadral wrote: »I enjoyed Skyrim but ESO's more my game. Storylines are far more coherent here, and the questing has Skyrim beat by a mile. If it weren't for seeing other players, I could almost imagine this game as the RPG I wanted Skyrim to be.
I like freedom, but Skyrim was a little too free. I like a nice, linear story far more. By the time I finished Skyrim's main story, I'd already forgotten how it began
I'm actually not much into the MMO genre. I prefer an open world SPMR game like Skyrim. I did the MQ a couple of times, then I started adding in quest mods. In the last couple of years, I've kept Legacy of the Dragonborn in my load order permanently. Love it! Probably won't do Odyssey unless something changes and ice decides to make it available for SLE - I really dislike SSE (and CC of course).
I feel like I've kind of gotten stuck with MMOs to a certain extent. What I love are nice, linear single-player RPGs without open worlds tacked on. The kind of games with a good 30-60 hour storyline with crafted and story-relevant side quests. Unfortunately, those are a rare breed these days. I'd die for another KOTOR or Dragon Age: Origins or Mass Effect, or, heck a Kingdoms of Amalur. A lot of story-oriented MMOs have a light enough storyline that I can remember most of it despite the massive worlds. They're not the best substitute for my kind of RPG, but they're almost close enough
What's Odyssey-- a Skyrim mod?
Sylvermynx wrote: »jainiadral wrote: »Sylvermynx wrote: »jainiadral wrote: »I enjoyed Skyrim but ESO's more my game. Storylines are far more coherent here, and the questing has Skyrim beat by a mile. If it weren't for seeing other players, I could almost imagine this game as the RPG I wanted Skyrim to be.
I like freedom, but Skyrim was a little too free. I like a nice, linear story far more. By the time I finished Skyrim's main story, I'd already forgotten how it began
I'm actually not much into the MMO genre. I prefer an open world SPMR game like Skyrim. I did the MQ a couple of times, then I started adding in quest mods. In the last couple of years, I've kept Legacy of the Dragonborn in my load order permanently. Love it! Probably won't do Odyssey unless something changes and ice decides to make it available for SLE - I really dislike SSE (and CC of course).
I feel like I've kind of gotten stuck with MMOs to a certain extent. What I love are nice, linear single-player RPGs without open worlds tacked on. The kind of games with a good 30-60 hour storyline with crafted and story-relevant side quests. Unfortunately, those are a rare breed these days. I'd die for another KOTOR or Dragon Age: Origins or Mass Effect, or, heck a Kingdoms of Amalur. A lot of story-oriented MMOs have a light enough storyline that I can remember most of it despite the massive worlds. They're not the best substitute for my kind of RPG, but they're almost close enough
What's Odyssey-- a Skyrim mod?
I dislike linear story-line games. I started gaming with AD&D in the mid-70s, writing and running my own scenarios for my daughter and her friends. No linear stuff for us. And my novels are anything but linear, because that's what I love to read (Tolkien, Misty Lackey - yes, they have over-arching story lines, but getting there is certainly not linear!). So when I found the SSI Gold Box Games way back when, I fell in love. That's been my prime focus ever since.
I have a few peculiar requirements for games besides that: no "you play the story the way the writers want it played (ICK), and no games where there's only one protagonist, and it's male. YUCK. I want to play a game's story my way, period.
Nope. I never played the Witcher et al.
jainiadral wrote: »I enjoyed Skyrim but ESO's more my game. Storylines are far more coherent here, and the questing has Skyrim beat by a mile. If it weren't for seeing other players, I could almost imagine this game as the RPG I wanted Skyrim to be
I only ever played Skyrim in first person mode, so didn't care about looks.barney2525 wrote: »Bought skyrim
Never got past character creation because iMHO there was not a decent looking character to be made. Just can't play a game where I can't stand looking at the character.
lordrichter wrote: »jainiadral wrote: »I enjoyed Skyrim but ESO's more my game. Storylines are far more coherent here, and the questing has Skyrim beat by a mile. If it weren't for seeing other players, I could almost imagine this game as the RPG I wanted Skyrim to be
I was recently playing Skyrim (old-rim, not SE) and I was reminded of something. Skyrim is LONELY. My character is the only important thing happening. Everyone else in the world, what few of them exist, is there because I am. They serve me. They have no life outside of mine.
For years, I have been adding Follower Mods, and whatever passes for state-of-the-art follower control frameworks, into my Bethesda games. It isn't so much that I want to make the game easier, or have some other character do everything, but that I got so damn lonely playing those games that I was adding a friend to the game just so that I wasn't alone. Of course, I went for the complicated "semi-intelligent" followers with custom VO with something to actually say. Followers of lesser intelligence, and other NPC mods, add static life to inns and taverns.
I don't group up a lot in ESO. Actually, I almost never do. I am a die hard solo player that just does not want to feel ALONE running around some huge empty open world. ESO is the first Elder Scrolls game where I have not felt alone in the world.