I use to have this issue. The best solution I learned was to make new characters on the PTS, then play them in various areas in game to see them in varying lighting, and try on several outfits. Appearance tokens are free on PTS, so tweaking appearances is much easier.
The only problem is people playing on console and Stadia don't have access to the PTS, nor do people who don't have the space to install it. Plus there's the fact that if you want to tweak an existing character, you can only do it if your region is saved to the server.I use to have this issue. The best solution I learned was to make new characters on the PTS, then play them in various areas in game to see them in varying lighting, and try on several outfits. Appearance tokens are free on PTS, so tweaking appearances is much easier.
It's a great tool to use for people who have access to it. But considering how bad the lighting is for character creation and how different characters look between creation and the actual game...we really should at least have a grace period where we can change things for free. Maybe for two or three days? Especially since certain things are very easy to forget to change, like a character's voice.
I use to have this issue. The best solution I learned was to make new characters on the PTS, then play them in various areas in game to see them in varying lighting, and try on several outfits. Appearance tokens are free on PTS, so tweaking appearances is much easier.
Oh my word this is such a good tip! Thank you!
Just buy crowns for gold (give somebody gold to gift you appearance change token in return).
No idea what exchange ratio is because I don't participate in that but I think it's well over 1000:1 crown at PCEU.
TheGreatBlackBear wrote: »Fallout 76 another Bethesda MMO which is actually perceived to be even more predatory
or increase a bit a arm size because of a weirdly made motif
Kiralyn2000 wrote: »or increase a bit a arm size because of a weirdly made motif
. . . I'm not really sure the Appearance Change system was designed (or priced) expecting people to do that level of tweaking. Am I the only one who thinks that's a bit extreme?
BretonMage wrote: »Kiralyn2000 wrote: »or increase a bit a arm size because of a weirdly made motif
. . . I'm not really sure the Appearance Change system was designed (or priced) expecting people to do that level of tweaking. Am I the only one who thinks that's a bit extreme?
I admit I've spent an embarrassing amount of crowns tweaking my one character. Sometimes even after playing with my character for hundreds, even thousands, of hours, I'd realise something's just not quite what I had in mind for her eyes or brows or whatever, and it would really bug me till I get it fixed.
And obviously since it's a character I've grown attached to (not to mention the progress I've made with her), I'd rather just spend the crowns than delete and restart.
This is just one of the many examples of why I would be embarassed to recommend ESO to anyone. I can only speak from my personal game experience, but ESO has the most predatory micro transaction practices I've come across. I can't tell you how many times I've made a character to only see it looks way lighter/darker/shorter/fatter/has an oddly large arm once I've seen it in game. There should at least be an option to preview the character in the world instead of some dimly lit study with the absolute worst freaking lighting.
NotaDaedraWorshipper wrote: »This is just one of the many examples of why I would be embarassed to recommend ESO to anyone. I can only speak from my personal game experience, but ESO has the most predatory micro transaction practices I've come across. I can't tell you how many times I've made a character to only see it looks way lighter/darker/shorter/fatter/has an oddly large arm once I've seen it in game. There should at least be an option to preview the character in the world instead of some dimly lit study with the absolute worst freaking lighting.
If you think ESO has the most predatory micro transactions then you have not seen a lot of those.
Kiralyn2000 wrote: »TheGreatBlackBear wrote: »Fallout 76 another Bethesda MMO which is actually perceived to be even more predatory
...since when? It doesn't have a required sub, and it doesn't have any "content" DLC. (admittedly, new content comes out super slow). Yeah, it's got lots of cosmetics, but it's season pass gives an amount of cash shop currency + other cosmetics. And no-one actually needs the silly Repair Kits/Scrap kits/Lunchboxes that the shop sells, playing the game throws piles of them at you. There are no "crown crates".
Only really comparable thing to ESO is the whole "sub for Craft Bag / Scrap Box" thing.
(ditto on the WoW comparisons - it's a required-sub game. They tend to do some things differently than f2p/b2p games. The WoW barbershop was only added in v3, and expanded to facial features in v6. They don't have quite as many character creation sliders/options as newer MMOs do - actually, looking at the wiki, there's just three options for each race/gender: hair style, hair color, <facial feature>.)
---
I certainly think that there should be an in-game barber for changing your hair, especially since they sell additional hairstyles.
But. . .or increase a bit a arm size because of a weirdly made motif
. . . I'm not really sure the Appearance Change system was designed (or priced) expecting people to do that level of tweaking. Am I the only one who thinks that's a bit extreme?
(I'll admit that I've never used Appearance Change in a game with a paid system. If I don't like how a character looks when I get out of the original creation screen, I'll delete & start again, but that's it. Even in games where you can do it incredibly easily - like Star Trek Online or City Of Heroes, where every "outfit slot" included your character slider settings and making changes cost effectively nothing - I don't make changes often.)
This is just one of the many examples of why I would be embarassed to recommend ESO to anyone. I can only speak from my personal game experience, but ESO has the most predatory micro transaction practices I've come across. I can't tell you how many times I've made a character to only see it looks way lighter/darker/shorter/fatter/has an oddly large arm once I've seen it in game. There should at least be an option to preview the character in the world instead of some dimly lit study with the absolute worst freaking lighting.