Journal grub's Journal: OMFG - Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion. 7
If you've read any of my postings on downloading music, movies or warez, you know I'm a big believer in test driving things so long as you're somewhat honest and buy what you enjoy.
Last Thursday after reading yet another glowing review of The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion I recalled that the ISO with crack was sitting there waiting for install (I'm a degenerate collector of warez, that goes back to ~1980 and the Apple ][+.) So I installed the game that night with the crack. Friday night at home Kim was busy doing something so I had a couple of hours to blow. Off to the game.
I was blown away. Amazingly rich environment, wonderful storyline and plenty of action. Off to bed. Fast forward to Saturday morning and I was back to Oblivion. Sunday morning was like Saturday morning, in Oblivion with a steaming cup of tea at my side.
It was then I decided the game was going to be played a lot and that it was worth my money. I bought the Collector's Edition of Oblivion for CA$69.95. Not cheap but if the game were to end now with the ~8 hours of play I've got in it, then its been worth every penny. Best bit, though, the reviews all claim between 200 and over 300 hours of play if you go on all the various side missions.
If you would like a D&Dish style RPG, selectable first or third person view, good combat, lush environment, immersive storyline you must check this game out.
That said, I have only one real gripe so far: the damn copy protection! I haven't installed the real game from DVD yet as I already have a working copy with a crack and no disk check. If I install software I've bought off the disc, I still run a crack. Software vendors won't replace damaged discs so the safest place for them is in the package, not in your drive slowing down the game loading as the checks take place.
Get it through your heads, software makers, protection makes it harder for legitimate users to use your stuff. The people who want your stuff for free will always get it.
Is it waay off in its own system? (Score:2)
Re:Is it waay off in its own system? (Score:1)
You mean Morrowind? I played that for all of an hour or so and put that lame title to bed. I'm not a huge RPG player and don't have a lot of experience with them. If pressed I'd say the Oblivion RPG style is somewhat similar to Baldur's Gate. (BG is a third person game, etc., I'm just referring to the style of character control.)
One thing with Oblivion that I like is being able to hotkey any weapons and spells with a user-defined hotkeys makes the game that much more immersive. I don't like a game where I
Re:Is it waay off in its own system? (Score:2)
Dude... that's putting my expectations pretty high. I mean, that's one of the best RPG games, period. Maybe I'll give'r a shot, then.
Re:Is it waay off in its own system? (Score:1)
Remember that my exposure to RPGs is pretty slim as I don't have the patience or I lose interest fast with tweaks and menus. I'd recommend a warez copy or a demo (is there one?) first. If you like it, buy it!
Re:Is it waay off in its own system? (Score:2)
Re:Is it waay off in its own system? (Score:2)
My big problem with Morrowind was the main quest. I never felt like doing it because it barely reveals itself at the start. You get dumped in Seyda Neen, meet an annoying wood elf (I know, "annoying wood elf" is redundant), then get shipped off to Balmora, where the local Blades Master tells you to go play errand boy for the Fighter's Guild so he can go back to his drug habit. And this is supposed to lead to something big?
In Oblivion, you spend a few seconds being taunted by a dark elf in the prison cell
Disc requirement and such (Score:1)
In other news I now regret picking Light Armor as one of the skills for my mage, because soon I'll be able to defend with magic as well as attack. Ah well :]