Ryath_Waylander wrote: »I just skip the tutorial, walk to the nearest boat/caravan, port to my alliance starting town and take a blow to the head from the hooded stranger.One way ticket to Coldharbour. But yes, this convoluted method gets irritating after the 12th alt.
Ryath_Waylander wrote: »I just skip the tutorial, walk to the nearest boat/caravan, port to my alliance starting town and take a blow to the head from the hooded stranger.One way ticket to Coldharbour. But yes, this convoluted method gets irritating after the 12th alt.
I don’t think it’s so much an issue of the tutorial, the one from Elsweyr does a far better job of actually introducing players to the game mechanics than any of the previous tutorials, but an issue of where players start the game proper.
Ideally players should have some kind of choice about where to start.
And ZOS should develop more tutorials that players could return to whenever they wish.
I dislike this, too. I liked my Morrowind tutorial on my first character but I didn’t create my second until after buying Elsweyr so I don’t even know what the Summerset tutorial is like.
Ryath_Waylander wrote: »I just skip the tutorial, walk to the nearest boat/caravan, port to my alliance starting town and take a blow to the head from the hooded stranger.One way ticket to Coldharbour. But yes, this convoluted method gets irritating after the 12th alt.
Ryath_Waylander wrote: »I just skip the tutorial, walk to the nearest boat/caravan, port to my alliance starting town and take a blow to the head from the hooded stranger.One way ticket to Coldharbour. But yes, this convoluted method gets irritating after the 12th alt.

That is awful. I decided to make a new character today and do the tutorial just because i havent done the tutorial in many years. You forced me in to elswyr?
Just let us choose where to start damn it.
There is one huge advantage to new tutorials in new zones. All those containers 😍
Maybe I’ve got good tutorial luck, or whatever, but I’d usually pick up at least one new zone furnishing plan each time I’d run.