Yeah Todd, that means people want a deeper RPG experience than you give with just a simple perk system that allows you to be good at everything all at once.
Heh. Playing the game now. You’re gonna have to sink hundreds of hours to fill that damn tree. I got 48hrs clocked and only Level 26. Barely touched rank 3 perks and haven’t maxed out one yet.
I say if you put a month game time into a single character, fuck it be good at everything. Builds be damned. You earned it.
I also like how you have to successfully use the skills you unlock in order to level them more
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Fallout 76 came out five years ago. It’s the only Bethesda game in recent history. (I still really like it)
Thats not true! Skyrim came out 2 years ago. Before that they had Skyrim which came out 5 years ago, piggybacking off the success of Skyrim which came out 6 years ago. There was also Skyrim back in 2011 which I guess was more than 12 years ago but it feels like just yesterday.
Skyrim came out on every platform except Linux. That’s a slap in the face.
In other words, they release games at a similar rate to most AAA developers that aren’t making CoD or yearly sports titles?
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Fallout 3 is older than me baha
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How often do people expect developers to release AAA titles?
Guerrilla Games released Horizon Forbidden West in 2022, and the only previous title in ‘recent’ history’ was the prequel 5 years earlier.
Larian released BG3 this year, and the only previous title in recent history was Original Sin 2 was 6 years earlier.
I’ll stick to my boomer shooters.
Is this supposed to make me want to play the game?
No. What it is is their best game since Skyrim. I’m enjoying it for what it is. For one I’m playing a charismatic/diplo character and there are so many Persuade and skill check options in dialog. Far more than in the last 4 Bethesda games combined. And if that’s boring I’ve also specced into John Wick one/two hit kill Pistol shit too.
It’s a fun game, I’m loving Starfield. But it doesn’t have the same RPG elements as I was hoping.
Fortunately Baldur’s Gate 3 got me there.
Fortunately for them, they already got your money. That’s the Bethesda MO… over-promise, under-deliver and fans will justify the rest. How many endings was FO3 suppose to have? I fully understand liking something that has flaws, but they shouldn’t be excused because of it.
But it doesn’t have the same RPG elements as I was hoping
I feel like hope wasn’t warranted there with the obvious streamlining trend since Skyrim*. I could maybe see being cautiously optimistic, as in waiting for reviews.
Not that it comes as a shock, I’m sure I’ll hear others say the same with the next elder installment.
*=They at least made an attempt with FO3, skill checks+perks (plus the XP system is less grind-y than Oblivion even if it is simplified and less “immersive”). Also improved upon by FONV. (I didn’t have a good start with Morrowind, in fairness it probably was my fault for some of it but I don’t think skill grind and dice-roll misses are a good combo plus needing meta-knowledge even if that’s what makes replaying fun… because slog.)
Ok so he doesn’t understand what makes an rpg beyond skill points. Explains a lot in hindsight. And got so close to clarity when he said they are making a game true to who they are. Just one fast travel away.
The bastardization of rpg really sucks. What about the old-school fallout and elder scrolls games, even? Surely Todd must be familiar with those. They were a lot more rpg than 90% of rpg games today.
I want my choices to matter. The choices largely do not matter, if you’re even given a real choice at all. This has been the issue with their RPGs since Oblivion, and has only gotten worse over time. I don’t just mean how I move through a dungeon and take care of enemies; I mean in dialogue. When I am presented with a logical thing I could do or say, but I don’t actually have the option to do it, it sucks.
It’s kind of a defining feature of Bethesda IP. It’s how they maintain their IP. Where were you when the dragon broke?
I was in wayrest, daggerfall and sentinel at the same time
You don’t want a CRPG. You want an interactive novel.
Baldur’s Gate 3 recently, and all the classic CRPGs of the 90’s and early 2000’s had this.
You don’t want a CRPG. You want an FPS where number go up
Yes Todd, video games have changed. Some would even say grown & matured. Every game has aspects & mechanics from multiple genres. Like, one of the most played racing games is GTAV, probably.
The problem is that Todd and the rest of the creative team decided rather than doubling down on the RPG elements in a meaningful way, they would rather strip away all the mechanics and nerf them into essential obsolescence.
Planets were originally going to be a lot less forgiving and you would need different space suits for the environments. So for example, your frost prevention suit wouldn’t help you in a high radiation environment, and you would need a different set of suits for different conditions. Not anymore! Now we just get a little icon in the HUD that says “planet conditions bad” and does nothing meaningful.
Starfield just made me want to go back to Cyberpunk 2077 where all the ground-based mechanics are done better, or to No Man’s Sky, where all the ground-based and space-based mechanics are better.
Dudes stuck in the 90’s. I’m a little surprised he even knows what other games look like. He’s only worked with one game engine his entire career.
Oh wait, that’s not true. He also released two mobile games… that are the same game, artwork and everything. So, two game games. He has created two different games his entire career.
I argue he’s stuck in the late 2000s early 2010s.
Morrowind was significantly more indepth than any of their games released after.
He’s got the “well skyrim sold well so let’s just go with that”
I only said 90’s because Morrowind was basically built late 90s. You’re right though.
He’s a game director, I can guarantee you he doesn’t touch the engine anymore.
Why does everyone blame creation engine for everything they don’t like? Unreal is even older and you don’t see anyone bitching about it.
People always complain about Unreal like the performance/optimization issues and texture pop-in.
Those are regular complaints, it doesn’t get blamed for every issue games made with it have.
I often see people saying Bethesda should switch to Unreal because Creation is outdated.
Creation is tailored specifically for Bethesda games. It’s a branch of GameBryo. People want them to stop using Creation because of how janky and buggy thier games are. The idea being if they used a better engine the games would be better.
Personally I think it’s Todd Howard and Pete Hines that are the causes of the stale janky games. But the engine (again, the only platform they’ve ever worked with) does not help.
Epic also doesn’t claim Unreal is a completely brand new engine when it releases a new version update.
People love to feel smart throwing terms around, I guess
I also don’t see the exact same bugs in unreal 5 that I did in unreal 3.
Creation engine 2 has the same bugs I saw in fallout 3, and the same limitations. They’ve updated it to use 64 bit so they can cram in more shitty scripts, and they’ve updated it to use modern rendering techniques. The underlying issues with quest triggers, npc spawning, and collision are all still present.
Changing engines would destroy the modding community, it’s as simple as that.
Without Creation engine, Bethesda games would not feel like Bethesda games.
That’s only a problem if you’re gonna release the same game 6+ times on the same engine with slight upgrades and expect the modding community to keep up.
Overhauling the engine to fix long standing bugs won’t necessarily change the fact that it’s a plug-in based engine.
There’s only one company I know of that has done that exact same scenario. Sounds like a problem they made for themselves.
Hey hey, that’s not entirely true. Before the creation engine, they did use gamebryo as well as an in-house engine for the older titles pre-Morrowind.
Its just that the creation engine is a carbon copy rip off of gamebryo. The initial version of the creation engine even had the same bugs from gamebryo, some of which persist to this day.
Creation is an inhouse branch of GameBryo. Howards first game was Morrowind. He wasn’t part of any of the older titles.
Huh, I always thought that the creation engine was something they built from scratch. No wonder it has all the same problems.
he’s only worked with one game engine
Please please please STOP saying “game engine” for every little shit, it doesn’t matter at all most of the time. In this particular case, it doesn’t matter in the slightest, not even one tiny bit.
Stop. Using. Terms. You. Don’t. Understand.
Sure, happy to.
If you can tell me what other engine he’s worked with.If you can tell me the connection between a game engine and game design I will happily answer
Interesting take, my friend. Interesting take.
Feigning complete ignorance after telling someone they don’t know what they’re talking about is one way to stop any discussion.
The engine does matter because it’s the reason the game is 40% loading screens, which is one of the biggest complaints.
which clearly isn’t what the comment was about, so instead of filling your mouth with “gAmE eNgInE” feeling the smart person ever just shut up
I liked gamers better when they didn’t throw around game dev terms thinking they knew anything at all
You’re obviously way too smart for the rest of us.
Please explain to us dummies how an engine tailered for the last 20 years specifically for open world skill point based action rpgs has nothing to do with open world skill point based action rpg games.
I always feel like the only games Todd ever played was Pacman and Skyrim.
Man games are so good now, no need to improve or change anything, we have arrived
My expectations:
The multiple NPC’s on my ship won’t talk over one another while I’m hailing another ship.
There is the fan, cora, cole, myself, and another crew member I bought in a bar all sharing a class A ship with a single bed, maybe one of these Habs should have been filled with bunks to make sense?
The game shouldn’t crash constantly.
More original names for things that ‘the artifacts’. That’s a good first draft but come on.
Fallout and Elderscrolls had a lot of fun little side stories that revealed themselves on notes and computers as you explored the world. Starfield is lucky to have one memo talking about the facility before the spacers arrived to murder everyone.
Enemies should empty clip after clip into the window I am standing behind.
I always make these fat, clunky, massive ships with enough habs to theoretically actually house my crew. They don’t maneuver too well but they feel more logical than what is effectively a starfighter holding 7 people when the crew is clearly only 3 or 4.
To your note about environmental stories: they are definitely there. You can find derelict ships floating in space with audio or text logs about what may have happened. Some of them are pretty creepy.
I’ll keep an eye out, I haven’t seen any derelict ships so far and I’m like 50 hours in
I’m the system map, there will be POIs near planets. They’ll say either “ship,” “hostile activity,” or “sensor contact” which will all give you something to do.
God of war ragnarok tuned this way down. Level is tied to equipment (max 9), xp is spent as currency on skills. I really liked it. Didn’t feel like the game was RPGified at all.
Similarly, Fable did that. Using specific skill types would grant experience points to spend in that category, plus a general xp currency that can go into any category.
Damn what a great game…
Loved Fable, 2 was top tier imo.
Which is exactly how the elder scrolls has been since Daggerfall at least. The only difference is you didn’t have any specialization choices until Skyrim with the perks.
“Everything is an RPG, that’s why we doubled down on RPGs to stand out”. Mmmkay then.
“Everything is an RPG” says the guy whose company has stripped out all but the most basic of RPG elements from their games.