Poll: Skyrim: how often will you be using fast travel?

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Ruwrak

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Sep 15, 2009
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Like alot of people stated. Morrowind had it the best way, hands down. But I think that Oblivion stayed a bit more to well... I can't call it reality really with all the gates opening etc. But a Stilt Rider would not fit the scenery. Morrowind was murky, rainy and a giant tick just... well it blended in perfect. I suppose that Oblivion could have had something like that, but a Stilt Rider did not fit.


Now coming on topic. Fast travel in Skyrim? Perhaps by giant Mammoth? You know the wooly hairy things from the gameplay video. It would make sense (as much as a giant tick would) to have that as a fast travel animal rather then opening your map, point your finger somewhere and close your eyes.


Right?
 

Zantos

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Jan 5, 2011
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It depends on what I'm doing. If I fancy sitting down for 10 hours straight I'll get a horse and roam and explore. If I just fancy half an hour of beasting things to death with a giant arse sword then I'll fast travel to wherever there be dragons.
 

squid5580

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Feb 20, 2008
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Not as much as I did in Fallout thanks to them charging me for it. I use it to get my max wieght in useless crap then teleport back to my base, stash crap that I never sell but plan too, then back to where I was. I guess it won't be as economical feasible this time around.
 

WanderingFool

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Apr 9, 2009
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Well, in oblivion, I used it alot of the time as it was easier than trying to drive (and drive is the perfect word here) a horse. You get a little rock jutting out, and the horse fucking stops! But fast-travel doesnt detract from my experience in Oblivion or either fallout games, as I still explore; Fast-travel just allows me to complete quest quicker as it seems most quests in oblivion where basically fetch or "go here and talk to A, than go here and Talk to B, than go back to here and talk to A again".
 

Akytalusia

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Nov 11, 2010
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it'll be just like the previous games for me, i'll swear not to use it, but my willpower won't last. i'll start using it eventually.
 

Onyx Oblivion

Borderlands Addict. Again.
Sep 9, 2008
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Pretty much all the time.

I mean, I've not no aversion to getting all my loot out of a dungeon raid quickly.
 

brunothepig

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May 18, 2009
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By the sounds of things I'll be waiting for some nice modders to put some alternatives to travel in there. I hated Oblivion's system, and no I couldn't just not use it, because the only other option was walking. Morrowind had spells, silt striders, boats, so there really wasn't as much walking as people say. And what walking there was really served to make the world feel big.
 

staika

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Aug 3, 2009
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I admit the first time I played oblivion I didn't know there was a fast travel system so I made my guy walk everywhere but once I discovered there was a fast travel system I basically used it to travel to the closest area I could to the place I was going all the time, and I might start abusing it in skyrim as well.
 

Dravus

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Feb 28, 2010
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since I'll be playing to make as much money as possible....I'll end up using fast travel only really to go to town and sell the loot and go back to where I was....like the old Mark and Recall spells from Morrowind
 

BloatedGuppy

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Feb 3, 2010
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I use it on those occasions where it's a place I've already been back and forth from 100 times and I'm being sent on some ridiculous courier mission of "there and back again". That's the only time I use it. My appreciation of and affection for Oblivion/Fallout 3 rose dramatically when I stopped using fast travel.
 

GundamSentinel

The leading man, who else?
Aug 23, 2009
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Depends on how interesting it is to walk/ride everywhere. If it's like Oblivion or Fallout 3, I doubt I'll use fast travel very often. If it's like Far Cry 2, I'll horribly abuse it whenever I can.
 

WouldYouKindly

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Apr 17, 2011
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I will to get me to the general area I want to be in. Once there, I'll explore and find what I can. For me, immersion takes a back seat to fun and walking 500 miles while killing the occasional wolf is not my idea of fun.
 

RuralGamer

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Jan 1, 2011
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Ultimately it depends on how accessible locations are and how much work has to be done to get from place to place; if I'm constantly having to stop and kill dragons, I may find it more tempting.
I do hope though that you can't fast travel from the start and have to find locations first, as in Fallout 3 and New Vegas; the fact all the towns were easily reachable from the start in Oblivion kinda broke the immersion a bit.
 

baddude1337

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Jun 9, 2010
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Probably a lot. It can get really boring and I don't have a huge amount of time to devote to gaming, so an hour walk across the map is a bit of a kill-joy for me, it's one reason I can't really get into Morrowind (that, and the shitty combat).

That said, I am usually in the mood for some good adventuring so will explore a lot just as I did in Oblivion, it's just mainly quests involving long walks I will use it.
 

Epona

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Jun 24, 2011
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In Oblivion I would run by foot everywhere until I got my athletics skill up pretty high. The horse was useless because you could run faster than the horse before too long. It was fun to take a slow character and watch his speed increase. If Skyrim has the same system I'll run everywhere, if not, I'll fast travel most of the time.
 

WolfThomas

Man must have a code.
Dec 21, 2007
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Probably ocaisonally, I have no problem with them putting it in for some players, but in doing so they cut stuff like teleports, boats, silt-strider equivalents, mark and recall. I wish we had both features, any redunancy can be hand waved by them being quicker (like in hours passed in game). Hell I'd love if Mages (or yourself) could telport you to a random spot on a map that'd be awesome. Also bring back slowfall, jump spells and levitate.

Mr Thin said:
I really, really hope they include an option to turn it off, because if it's there, I lack the willpower to not use it, despite knowing full well that doing so will detract from the experience.
This a hundred times this. I don't want to use it, but I know I will. I liked in Morrowind that you really had to plan any long expedition out of the main cities.