irishda said:
King of the Sandbox said:
Anyone can plainly see, from the hordes of favorable reviews and praise, that Skyrim will be a benchmark for eastern RPG's for a while. It's not bolstering, it's simple fact.
babinro said:
Considering the escapist polls saying it's the best game of all time it better be remembered.
Seriously though, beyond the hardcore Elder Scroll fans there's no way.
There is really nothing in the game that truly stands out as remarkable. The characters and story elements are not exceptional. The environment is atmospheric but nothing memorable like say Bioshock. The combat feels behind it's time and the game has obvious flaws/bugs.
What Skyrim has going for it is great timing in it's release. People are ready for this kind of game and it is a great game because of the sum of it's parts. From my own 60 hours of gameplay, about the only thing I'll likely remember years from now was the Dark Brotherhood quest line. It was annoying (thanks to you know who), fun and led to something memorable.
It's so amazing to have these two posts side by side.
I'm not so sure what this is meant to imply.
The division of gamers over the game's epicness? Surely that alone should grant it some memory space. I mean, the sheer amount of 'controversy' surrounding it is going to burn it in to everyone's collective conscience, including the detractors, much to their eternal chagrin and my eternal delight. But the vast, VAST majority of people will remember it as something special, a benchmark in gaming, just like it's predecessors. Whenever a game comes out that changes how I play video games, I remember it. Fondly, I might add.
There are two major complaints about the game; the lack of deep, involving characters (Which I kind of disagree with, to a point), and bugs/glitches.
The characters, I can understand, but the bugs thing... seriously? Name 1 AAA game in the past 5 years that hasn't shipped with bugs. I dare you.
Now, take into account the sheer GIRTH of content in Skyrim, weigh it against the bugs, and you'll barely see the scales tip at all. Hell, even most haters have gone on record praising Skyrim as the most bug-free Bethesda game in a long time. And even these bugs aren't as frequent as detractors would have you believe. Most problems I do hear about are from the PC side of things, (PS3 Slowdown and backwards dragons excepted) but that's to be expected with any game of this magnitude on a platform that's as variable as snowflakes.
But the point is, should bugs rule it out as a great game? Of course not, don't be silly. I can tell you of at least 5 bugs and glitches in OoT, off-hand. It's a petty, alarmist detraction and is the last defense of those who hate to see a game that isn't their personal favorite succeed.
And yes, call me a fanboy, as long as you know that I realize the game isn't perfect. NO game is. I'd like a magic crafting system. I'd like more monster diversity. I'd like more things to spend my mountains of gold on. I wish things in my house would stay where I put them. I wish there were more non-human children. I wish my companions were a bit more talkative about themselves.
These are all things that can be improved on, but even if they're not, it doesn't take anything away from what is an amazing, immersive, and frankly epic, benchmark in rpg's.
I'm 160+ hours into my first and only character so far. I've never played a game this maddeningly addictive and fun, plain and simple. It's stolen mine, and hordes of other gamers/reviewers hearts, and it won't be letting go of them for a loooooong time. FACT.