OrionHardy said: My biggest problem is that the dragons don't feel like the big threat they are supposed to be, The fact that I have to more cautious of the giants is a bad sign.
Mavilu said: Yup. I put far more hours into it, but I actually stopped playing it a few times and I have only recently finished the main quests only because I don't like to leave games unfinished. Bland, bland, bland; and now that I have gone back to Oblivion, it seems even blander; it might be that I'm a girl and I like colorful fantasies (I was accused of that in another site for liking Oblivion better), but in Skyrim everyone was sad, dirty and looked downright cold, the cities where bland and all very similar looking, the frozen tundra didn't help either, I cannot tell you guys how many times my husband looked into the screen when I was trekking on the snow and asked me why was I playing in black and white.
Rhaegar said: Â (Morrowind's leveling was pretty bad too but since there was no level scaling at all it didn't really matter after a while.)
Sam Biscuits said: I've just started playing Oblivion again. My brother in law deleted my save years ago when I was halfway through. But after not long finishing Skyrim, Oblivion doesn't stand up well. It's silly things like the map and the menus that annoy me. Also tried Fallout 3 and stopped already, it's so brown and grey and dull.
Fincher said: As for New Vegas, there's two reasons that the "better writing" isn't such a draw. The first is that (unlike a lot of people) I didn't like Fallout 1 and 2, and while I normally do like Obsidian, it would be like David Fincher announcing he was making another Alien sequel. The second is that 3's writing never bothered me. It might not be masterful, but it served its purpose. If I were listing problems I had with the game, the writing wouldn't even come up.
Big Tall said: The new DLC for Skyrim has been announced: Hearthfire. I'm intrigued by the amount of options that we'll be given to build a home, but it doesn't seem nearly as customizable or unique as the trailer makes it out to be. Everyone will just build the biggest options, fill it with the same stuff and...yeah a new home. On the other hand, it would be nice to see where the plots of land will be. There are a few locations I wouldn't mind putting a home, to cut down on fast travelling or just for convenience. The adoption part? No thanks. Killing friendly-neighbourhood giants seems like something that will just get really annoying. Is anyone still playing? I haven't grabbed Dawnguard yet, but I will eventually. The extra content just isn't enough of a draw for me to want to jump back into the game/