Skyrim - PC Gamer Retrospective

Aubrielle

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Andy Kelly from PC Gamer goes back to Skyrim to talk about how well the game has aged in the years since its release. While he has a lot of the same gripes we do, his view is flattering overall.


The varied geography is what makes it one of the best open worlds on PC. Each region has a distinct atmosphere and personality. The Rift is gold and autumnal, with forests, lakes, and vineyards. An incongruously idyllic setting for the hotbed of crime and corruption that is Riften. Eastmarch is a volcanic, volatile landscape of bubbling hot springs and jagged rock. You can almost smell the sulphur in the air. To the far north, Winterhold is perpetually battered by blizzards and blanketed in thick snow. At night the sky is illuminated by vividly colourful aurora, a sight that never stops impressing. Whiterun is a vast, treeless tundra, freezing, grassy plains surrounding its central city.

At the centre of the map is the Throat of the World, a colossal mountain that you can’t help but feel the urge to climb when you first see it tickling the clouds. Your pilgrimage up it, and the view when you reach the peak, is one of the game’s best experiences. Just watch out for the frost troll lurking near the summit.

As is the case with a lot of RPGs, it’s the side quests where the best stuff lies. Joining the Dark Brotherhood and becoming a master assassin. Rising in the ranks of the Thieves Guild. Investigating a brutal murder in the city of Windhelm like some kind of fantasy gumshoe. Teaming up with a talking dog that’s actually a demon. Becoming a werewolf. Picking sides in a civil war. There are so many quests in Skyrim, from the epic to the absurd, and your journal is always fat with things to do. There isn’t much in the way of choice or branching paths, however, and far too many quests involve trekking through samey dungeons with a meagre reward at the end.
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I especially like to be able to choose from two dialogue options, i think its amazing in any RPG.
 
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I especially like to be able to choose from two dialogue options, i think its amazing in any RPG.

I found a picture of you and GothicGothicness giving a Skyrim review:

article-2218263-00C3FFBE00000578-865_634x384.jpg
 
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Skyrim may not be an awesome RPG, but it was a damn good hiking simulator, and I mean it in a flattering way.
 
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It can be a very enjoyable and addictive game...if you learn how to play it. Took me about twenty tries or so, to figure it out. :p
Whatever you do, don't try to do everything...you'll burn yourself out before you know it.
Imagine a backstory for your character, download a ****ton of specific mods for that purpose and play it for 30 hours or so, following a theme you picked for yourself. ( say you want to play as a ranger or a hunter: armors, bows, tall grass, hunting quest/guilds, Frostfall, Hunterbourne, etc).
And avoid crafting like plague.
 
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It's not enjoyable nor addictive. You can do everything and not burn. Keep google close for console commands that fix quest/inventory/script bugs.
All you need is norespawn mod and SkyUI.

If you're after visuals, instad of wasting time with Skyrim mods I suggest Watch Dogs, GTA5 and The Witcher 3.

One thing crossed my mind while I'm writing this. New GPUs are being released, isn't it odd noone used heavily modded Skyrim as performance test?
 
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Hiking simulator indeed. I have friends that rave to this day about it, I played it once and enjoyed it, but doubt I'll ever play it again.
 
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