The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim (2011)

Bethesda Game Studios

PC (Microsoft Windows) · PlayStation 3 · Xbox 360

4.30 from 14563 ratings · #93 top rated on Grouvee

28339 members have it in their collection · 2334 playing now · 5870 backlogged · 1898 wish listed

How long? Main story 54h · with extras 143h · 100% 250h (from 153 logged playthroughs)

Skyrim reimagines and revolutionizes the open-world fantasy epic, bringing to life a complete virtual world open for you to explore any way you choose. Play any type of character you can imagine, and do whatever you want; the legendary freedom of choice, storytelling, and adventure of The Elder Scrolls is realized like never before.
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Release dates

  • Nov 10, 2011 (North_America) PC (Microsoft Windows)
  • Nov 10, 2011 (Worldwide) PC (Microsoft Windows)
  • Nov 11, 2011 (North_America) PlayStation 3
  • Nov 11, 2011 (Europe) PlayStation 3
  • Nov 11, 2011 (Worldwide) PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
  • Dec 08, 2011 (Japan) PC (Microsoft Windows), PlayStation 3, Xbox 360

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1 star
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Community All Reviews Statuses

FatherLucas

Review FatherLucas 5/5 · Jan 30, 2023

A Recommendation/Warning

Many years in the far future you will lie on your deathbed, thinking about this review of The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim for PC. You will reminisce about how I called The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim the second best game of all time next to The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time.

And as you spend some of your last …

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Many years in the far future you will lie on your deathbed, thinking about this review of The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim for PC. You will reminisce about how I called The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim the second best game of all time next to The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time.

And as you spend some of your last seconds of breathing air from this corporeal earth thinking back on what should be an insignificant, irrelevant comment about a video game on Steam, you will be thinking about one of two things. You could think about how you heeded the advice of this seemingly inconsequential review and played the game, of course probably having several hours of endless fun screwing around as a medieval badass, meeting interesting characters, and enjoying a video game to the greatest extent one could possibly enjoy it.

Or you could regret not heeding the advice of this seemingly inconsequential review, and not play the game. And as you lie there, inert, coming to terms with your imminent and inevitable death, you can't help but wonder what could've been. If you had just spent the measly $20 to buy this game and perhaps just tried it. Perhaps it would've been a mediocre experience. But on the other hand, it could've been an immensely enjoyable experience.

And as your sight begins to fail, the room grows darker and darker, your organs begin to fail one by one, and death's icy hand reaches out to pull you down into the void, your last thought will be the realization that you would never know. As the neurons in your brain permeate this thought throughout your head, you will die.

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Enkiled

Review Enkiled 3/5 · Oct 21, 2022

An enormous time sink

Must be avoided like the plague, cause once you realise how much time you spent on it, your head hurts, arms turn shaky, eyes bloodshot and you realise how much of a pathetic loser you are :)

BallonDeZoulete

Review BallonDeZoulete 5/5 · Aug 27, 2022

Meilleur jeu de son année rien à redire pressé que Bethesda détruise la licence avec le prochain jeu

AlfredoSalza

Review AlfredoSalza 4/5 · Jun 9, 2022

I Think You Know Me

Yeah Skyrim is pretty good, just a tiny bit too streamlined for me. I mean every freaking dungeon is just a series of corridors so that is impossible for you to get lost, meanwhile you defeat the same zombies over and over again. Halfway into the game I just speedrunned the dungeons, avoiding all enemies I could.

I also don't …

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Yeah Skyrim is pretty good, just a tiny bit too streamlined for me. I mean every freaking dungeon is just a series of corridors so that is impossible for you to get lost, meanwhile you defeat the same zombies over and over again. Halfway into the game I just speedrunned the dungeons, avoiding all enemies I could.

I also don't enjoy things like after a couple of quests you are already recognized as a sort of hero for most people. I felt like I didn't have to work at all (earn) the fame that my character got.

Other than that, the game looks pretty, the music is great, voice acting is OK and the controls are decent. Combat is still a mess like it should be in Elder Scrolls haha. I had some other issues like the companions making the game too easy or the fights against the dragons getting super boring after the second or maybe third.

Sorry if this review focus on the negative, but honesty Skyrim is a fantastic game, as you have probably heard. And you should play it! :)

Completed on Xbox Series S, 27 hours.

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Witt997

Review Witt997 5/5 · Jan 28, 2021

Le antiche pergamene - Rotta a Skyrim

il mio primo Elder Scrolls non mi è dispiaciuto ma ho avvertito una mancanza di profondità, dovuta a quest (principale e gilde) che ho trovato sottotono rispetto ad altri giochi Bethesda. Viaggiare a vuoto non mi dà questa grandissima gioia, visto che preferisco avere degli obiettivi. L'ambientazione nevosa-montana non è entrata nelle mie corde. Per il resto un ottimo gioco …

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il mio primo Elder Scrolls non mi è dispiaciuto ma ho avvertito una mancanza di profondità, dovuta a quest (principale e gilde) che ho trovato sottotono rispetto ad altri giochi Bethesda. Viaggiare a vuoto non mi dà questa grandissima gioia, visto che preferisco avere degli obiettivi. L'ambientazione nevosa-montana non è entrata nelle mie corde. Per il resto un ottimo gioco di ruolo da provare assolutamente. Voto: 8.8/10

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Chovus

Status Chovus Apr 9, 2020

I got Skyrim for Christmas the year it came out and played it straight for months. As usual I play a male high elf paladin. I put the difficulty up to Master right after finishing the intro part with escaping Alduin. Then I explored more or less randomly while doing any quests that I came across. My focus was heavy …

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I got Skyrim for Christmas the year it came out and played it straight for months. As usual I play a male high elf paladin. I put the difficulty up to Master right after finishing the intro part with escaping Alduin. Then I explored more or less randomly while doing any quests that I came across. My focus was heavy armor, shield, one handed swords (I prefer quicker weapons so I can better time blocks), restoration for healing and alteration for defensive buffs. I also used conjuration for better weapons and summons to help me fight. The destruction shield spells work well with melee and I did a lot of sneaking and archery.

Typical combat situation would have me start by sneak sniping with a bow to do as much damage as possible until the enemies find me. Then I laugh at them because my focus is being a melee tank not an archer. Save stamina for blocks and hit with sword and cast spells as needed. I did not use a whole lot of consumables, preferring to fall back to cast healing or cast it between blocks. By the end game I had every skill except restoration and conjuration at 100, and only because I saw no need to practice those when I use them fairly regularly. Heavy armor maxed out naturally while I spent time letting giants hit me to max shield and light armor; I used my vast stores of looted food for that. I summoned ice atronarchs and killed then with a 2 hander to max that out. I went around as a destruction mage for a while to max that, complete with full archmage set. I had been using mostly archery to kill dragons, which does not work so well when they are in flight. Lightning bolts though do not have to worry about ballistics and leading the target. Speech, pickpocket and lockpicking all maxed out naturally while exploring and looting, while the remaining skills I had to grind. I ended up with a ton of crafted potions and preferred poisons. I ended the game at level 81 and could kill most things using archery before they could find me. I rarely needed to use magic or melee. When I did, shield perks made most enemies trivial; arrow and magic resist combined with charge and knockdown wrecked archers and mages, while the stun and disarm from power bash wrecked melee. I sided with the Imperials in the civil war.

I used god mode and no clipping liberally to save time. Typically I would kill everything, then put on god mode to loot everything not nailed down and bring it all back to town to sell. My base was my house in Whiterun and I had each container there dedicated to storing specific things. I never used followers unless they were needed for a quest; I find they get in the way and cramp my style, not to mention make the game even easier. I eventually decided I should get married after I had been to every town and met all the fine high elf ladies only to go online to see that only 1 high elf lady was eligible and that she was ugly. Well I was not having that so I got a marry anyone mod and married Nirya from the mage guild. Up until then the only mod I was using was female nudity and I later got the official improved textures. I then decided to make ultimate gear. I was aware of the ridiculous exploit of using fortify alchemy, enchanting and smithing potions to break the game and refused to do that. Really, those skills should never have had usable fortify effects, or at least not allow those to affect the power of items.

I did most content in the game and stopped playing for many years. In 2020 I went to play the dlcs. I started off getting used to the game and finishing up some radiant quests and side quests I had not yet completed, mostly with the Dark Brotherhood. I joined the Thieves guild and completed that arc. I normally stay away from underworld type things as a paladin character, but this was the 1st Elder Scrolls game where I felt the story and atmosphere were interesting enough to experience them. I noticed a higher Legendary difficulty and put that on, and found out about making skills legendary to level up more. I did archery, since that was not my main combat skill but was the one I used the most. I also did conjuration to respec the perks because I got all the necromancy ones and after realized I would never use them. I got sick of the limited gold merchants have and installed a mod to give them infinite gold. I do not know how I managed it years ago because I have a ridiculous amount of gold and no backlog of stuff to sell. I then did Dragonborn followed by Dawnguard. Dragonborn was very nostalgic, reminding me of Morrowind. I sided with the Vampire hunters and let Serana follow me around for most of it for story reasons. I never became a vampire and never wanted to. The last thing I did was finish the Companions arc because I did not want to be a werewolf either. I also used Mirak's book to refund the perks I put into enchanting. There are still places I have not been and I am sure sidequests I have not completed, do I might do a location or 2 occasionally. My cousin gave me his xbox version though I do not know if I want to play that. At some point I will play the entire game again from scratch with a ton of mods.

All of the main Elder Scrolls games are 9.5/10 masterpieces to me, though I think Skyrim might be my favorite among them. Oblivion and Morrowind annoyed me with the metagamey level up system where in order to get the best attribute gains, I had to keep track of each skill up and grind minor skills just before leveling up to make sure I got max gains each level. Daggerfall and Arena have too much randomized dice rolling and Daggerfall's dungeons are excessively tedious, though they are the only games in which selling loot is not an unnecessary pain in the ass. Skyrim manages to find the best overall balance between the amazing world building, immersion and combat, and the annoying bits. I do like the simplified attribute system and way in which frost and shock magic interacts with those. I do not care either way about the loss of the spell maker. The most annoying parts of Skyrim include: limited merchant gold, essential characters recovering to full health after a few seconds from going down and how easy it is rise in ranks in the guilds.

My end game stats are: level 92, 620 health, 340 stamina, 300 mana, 1.3 million gold

Most used magic: summon dremora lord, summon frost atronarch, summon storm atronarch (for dragons), close wounds, flame cloak, lighting bolt/thunder bolt (for dragons), marked for death, slow time and elemental fury.

Current stone power is The Mage to max out conjuration again, then The Warrior for max archery gains for level ups.

Perks:

Heavy armor: all

Shield: all except quick reflexes

One handed: max armsman, max bladesman, fighting stance, savage strike

Archery: max overdraw, max critical shot, eagle eye, power shot, quick shot

Sneak: all except assassin’s blade

Conjuration: expert, dual casting, summoner, atromancy, elemental potency (going to get twin souls at 100, and maybe master if I have enough mana to use it)

Destruction: expert, dual casting, 2 augmented shock

Restoration: adept, respite, regeneration, dual casting, recovery, avoid death

Alternation: master, 3 resistance, stability, atronarch

Enchanting: max enchanter, insightful, corpus, extra effect (I reset these at the end of Dragonborn)

Gear:

Daedric bow (legendary): 278 damage, soul trap, 15 fire damage, 42 shock damage

Daedric sword (legendary): 288 damage, no enchantment

Staff of daedric command and staff of paralysis

Aetherial crown (with lover’s stone)

Full set of archmage gear

Daedric armor (legendary): 304 armor, +70% mana regen, +35% stamina regen

Daedric boots (legendary): 130 armor, +45% damage for one handed, +35% stamina regen

Daedric gauntlets (legendary): 130 armor, +45% damage for one handed and bows

Daedric helm (legendary): 147 armor, +45% damage with bows, +70% mana regen

Necklace: +45% damage with one handed and bows

Ring: +45% damage with one handed and bows

Daedric shield (legendary): 88 armor, +45% block, +28% magic resist

Otar (+25% all elemental resists) and necklaces with 60-70% resist for each element, which I needed to survive anything using elemental damage enter image description here

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grok

Status grok Sep 11, 2019

With every Elder Scrolls game, I have a similar experience. I love exploring the world, I enjoy learning some of the game play and NPC stories, and I usually get very invested in one faction's story, but once I finish their quest line, I end up not wanting to play further, as I did the story that grabbed me...

In …

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With every Elder Scrolls game, I have a similar experience. I love exploring the world, I enjoy learning some of the game play and NPC stories, and I usually get very invested in one faction's story, but once I finish their quest line, I end up not wanting to play further, as I did the story that grabbed me...

In my current playthrough of Skyrim, I picture my character as a hunter/bounty hunter, so I naturally gravitated towards the companions. I flew thru all their main quests. I have some side quests and can pick up missions thru the companions, but after the investment I had in their storyline, I find myself struggling to want to play more.

I think I am going to take a brief break and come back fresh to the game, try to find another city or storyline to pursue. There are plenty more bandits for me to hunt down still, and maybe Kraven can finally start taking a stand with or against the Stormcloaks.

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Gangreen

Status Gangreen Aug 24, 2019

It's surprising how many times I have Googled "Skyrim quest-name glitch", found a solution, and then keep playing this game. I don' think I would do this with any other games.

grok

Status grok Aug 22, 2019

I have a love/hate relationship with Bethesda's open world RPGs. The scope and exploration is exhilerating. And I often enjoy my initial 1-2 week dives a lot; however, after that time, my interest tends to wane and fizzle and I move onto RPGs with focused stories.

Despite these struggles I love, LOVED Morrowind, finding the world and stories fascinating. When …

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I have a love/hate relationship with Bethesda's open world RPGs. The scope and exploration is exhilerating. And I often enjoy my initial 1-2 week dives a lot; however, after that time, my interest tends to wane and fizzle and I move onto RPGs with focused stories.

Despite these struggles I love, LOVED Morrowind, finding the world and stories fascinating. When Oblivion came out, I was less then impressed. In the years since, I sporadically play Skyrim, in the hopes of catching the enjoyment I had with Fallout 3 and Morrowind.

This means I own Skyrim on PS3, PC, and now Switch, despite only investing 10-15 hours in each version.

Welp, I am taking the dive again, this time on the Switch. The lacking of modding is a bit disappointing, but overall the port has been nice. Portability, particularly to play while laying down in bed, has been amazing. I am trying to play a character more based on a concept, then on a guild, storyline, ect.

My character is Kraven, a Wood Elf Hunter, who is looking for jobs as bounty hunter, hunting beasts, and with the Companions. 10 hours in and I am enjoying it.

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okayzoeyk

Status okayzoeyk Jul 4, 2019

I got my girlfriend to play Skyrim on her switch and I AM SO EXCITED TO WATCH HER EXPERIENCE IT FOR THE FIRST TIME!!! :D

SailorStar

Review SailorStar 5/5 · Oct 3, 2018

My favourite role playing game to date

There is so much I love about Skyrim, and it came at a crucial time in my life. My mental health was at its lowest, and so I dived into the land of Skyrim with a whole-hearted abandon, seeking escapism and fantasy. I found it.

Rather than tell you how much it meant to me, I think those answers are …

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There is so much I love about Skyrim, and it came at a crucial time in my life. My mental health was at its lowest, and so I dived into the land of Skyrim with a whole-hearted abandon, seeking escapism and fantasy. I found it.

Rather than tell you how much it meant to me, I think those answers are better found by reading the stories I wrote about my adventures. Check out my blog to find out how I went driving Grelod the Kind out of Riften, where I hid the Daedric rings (like horcruxes), and why I decided to murder Maven Blackbriar. https://xinsweald.wordpress.com/2012/05/08/tales-from-skyrim/

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Fugazi57

Status Fugazi57 Sep 18, 2018

I'm curious if there is anyone around here who is a Soulsborne fan but that recommends Skyrim?

I'm a Dark Souls fan, and the Dark Souls fanbase shits so much on Skyrim that it kinda turned me off on trying it out. Been looking for different opinions though.

nokobon

Status nokobon Aug 12, 2018

So for all I complained, I did spend 150 hours in this game before deciding to complete the main quest and call it a playthrough. As frustrating as the bug-ridden, unfinished mess of a game often was, I kept coming back for just a little more exploration, just a little more questing - let me just get this weapon, let …

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So for all I complained, I did spend 150 hours in this game before deciding to complete the main quest and call it a playthrough. As frustrating as the bug-ridden, unfinished mess of a game often was, I kept coming back for just a little more exploration, just a little more questing - let me just get this weapon, let me just recruit that follower, let me just get married to this person etc. The whole time, I complained about the shallowness of the story, the wooden dialogue, the confusing combat, the unrealistic interactions and so forth, yet I just kept playing, and I can't say that it wasn't engaging. I suppose the detailed, lively world tricked me into thinking that a wonderful, deep story must lie hidden somewhere within it - and it it took me this long to figure out that the world is all there is. ;-) I do have to say I rather liked the ending to the main quest, though - it contains many flashbacks to the very first mission (Bleak Falls Barrow), and the last quests do a wonderful job of reiterating that beautiful contrast of life and death that is so characteristic of the game world. I'm glad I played the questline to the end, and I'm also glad I'll get to play some different games with better stories now. Time for some wine!

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Tidida

Status Tidida Jun 22, 2018

Dei uma pausa nas main quests e estou fazendo só as side quests. Quase 50 horas de jogo.

Gangreen

Status Gangreen Jun 17, 2018

Okay, I’m out. This game is no fun anymore. There are lots of things wrong with it and I have tried to get into it but have decided the actual game part is just bad.

First off, I am playing it on Switch. What I have heard from everyone is “you should play it on PC for the mods”. I …

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Okay, I’m out. This game is no fun anymore. There are lots of things wrong with it and I have tried to get into it but have decided the actual game part is just bad.

First off, I am playing it on Switch. What I have heard from everyone is “you should play it on PC for the mods”. I eventually realized the reason for this has to do with real problems that others are fixing. Inventory management and UI leave a lot to be desired. Part of this is the dated nature of the game and how much developers have learned over the years with how to create open world games. Part of this is just bad design.

Inventory management. Nobody likes inventory management. It can be a decent mechanic used to challenge the player of a game but you must use it sparingly. Skyrim is an old school encumbrance system, which completely blows. There is a reason you don’t see this system anymore. One of the big issues is ingredients and miscellaneous crap. I can’t tell if these things are useful or not. Should I keep them? Should I junk them? I would have to look at a FAQ to know anything. Even if I want them for crafting one day why make it a burden on me until then? Why not have a loot box or make this minor stuff weigh zero?

When I first started, I thought it was cool to wander around and there was so much to do and see. Now I am stuck in part of the game, Soltsteim, and this is like a tiny fish bowl compared to the rest of Skyrim. Open world games are great because you can wander from place to place or quest to quest or just explore. They did something wrong with this section of the game and yet it is mandatory. Further aggravating me is that the monsters here are extremely powerful and difficult to beat. I contrast this section with Eventide island in Breath of the Wild. That was a completely optional part of the game and could be difficult. I ran into it early on and had to give up and come back later. That was fine, there was plenty of other cool stuff to explore.

Skyrim has so much cool story going on and certainly has lots of systems to play with. Unfortunately I am tired of dealing with encumbrance and getting destroyed by high-level bad guys.

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XanderCat

Status XanderCat Jun 14, 2018

Wohoo I did it! It's been a long journey but I did get to a sort of "end" in Skyrim. I am certainly not done with the game, there is still plenty more to see and explore. However, I think this could be a good spot to pause the game and try to work on finishing some other games.

In …

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Wohoo I did it! It's been a long journey but I did get to a sort of "end" in Skyrim. I am certainly not done with the game, there is still plenty more to see and explore. However, I think this could be a good spot to pause the game and try to work on finishing some other games.

In this playthrough it took me 68 hours 8 minues and 52 seconds to finish the main questline in Skyrim, and I finished a lot of side quests including finishing the main quest line of both expansions. Total playtime as of right now 6/14/2018 on the Nintendo Switch player profile it says 105 hours of more, because of course I made multiple characters in Skyrim before settling on one.

Really great game and it worked well on the Switch.

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Gangreen

Status Gangreen Feb 6, 2018

Been playing through Skyrim on Switch. What a deep, enjoyable game. The style is a bit different than modern open world games like Assassin's Creed or even Zelda Breath of the Wild. Part of that is the lack of level indicators on enemies or quest markers on NPCs. It is nice and sparse and leaves me to just enjoy the …

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Been playing through Skyrim on Switch. What a deep, enjoyable game. The style is a bit different than modern open world games like Assassin's Creed or even Zelda Breath of the Wild. Part of that is the lack of level indicators on enemies or quest markers on NPCs. It is nice and sparse and leaves me to just enjoy the world and all its characters, politics, and intrigue. There are lots of storylines with great freedom to choose whether to align with thieves, rebels, or imperials.

The big downside is the ton of systems and difficulty in determining what to improve based on my own playstyle, which I have yet to discover. I try not to worry too much about builds and just do what I like. There is always a deep knowledgebase on the Internet if need be, given that the game has been out for 7 years.

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strawman_army

Status strawman_army Feb 6, 2018

While Skyrim does the two main things Bethesda is known for pretty well--providing a huge open world and player freedom of choice--it simply is not a good game in any other respect. It remains, years and countless re-releases later, a janky, bug-ridden mess that Bethesda seems totally uninterested in fixing. The combat, which is a huge part of what you …

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While Skyrim does the two main things Bethesda is known for pretty well--providing a huge open world and player freedom of choice--it simply is not a good game in any other respect. It remains, years and countless re-releases later, a janky, bug-ridden mess that Bethesda seems totally uninterested in fixing. The combat, which is a huge part of what you do in game, is still awful. Skyrim uses a dated graphics engine that is really beginning to show its age--it simply is not a good looking game. I cannot, for the life of me, understand why people keep giving Bethesda a pass on very basic and glaring problems that no AAA game should ever release with, let alone still have 7 years later. This is, in my opinion, one of the most overrated games of the last decade.

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SpoonMan

Review SpoonMan 3/5 · Mar 7, 2017

After playing the game for over 120 hours, finishing 423 quests and objectives, including the main quest, discovering 288 locations, reaching level 63, and killing over 50 dragons, I no longer feel like continuing. The ending was awkward and uninspiring. I do not want to spend over an hour typing a review for a game this enormous in this status. …

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After playing the game for over 120 hours, finishing 423 quests and objectives, including the main quest, discovering 288 locations, reaching level 63, and killing over 50 dragons, I no longer feel like continuing. The ending was awkward and uninspiring. I do not want to spend over an hour typing a review for a game this enormous in this status. I miss the epicness of Morrowind. This game completely ruined dragons for me.

The game shines when you use some of the great community mods. The vanilla version is quite good. However, because of the generic side-quests, hackneyed story, monochromatic landscapes, belittlement of the entire dragon species, and lack of a clear sense of difficulty progression, in my opinion, it fails to enter the realm of great role-playing games.

Actual Score: 3.5/5

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goatmek

Review goatmek 4/5 · Apr 29, 2014

Atmosphere: 4/5
Gameplay: 3/5
Music: 4/5
Sound: 3/5
Story: 4/5

A fantasy tale about the chosen one. The world is simply amazing, I can walk around in it forever. The gameplay and story however, leaves a little to be desired.

Tarfuin

Review Tarfuin 5/5 · Jan 14, 2014

There are a lot of reasons people play video games. It’s a fun, stimulating, often relaxing activity that requires thought and interaction. Fantastic stories unfold in which you carry a level of involvement. It’s a wonderful medium, but beyond that there lies a simpler draw. We want to feel legendary.

There’s nothing wrong with that urge, it’s great. It’s the …

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There are a lot of reasons people play video games. It’s a fun, stimulating, often relaxing activity that requires thought and interaction. Fantastic stories unfold in which you carry a level of involvement. It’s a wonderful medium, but beyond that there lies a simpler draw. We want to feel legendary.

There’s nothing wrong with that urge, it’s great. It’s the reason we get jazzed about seeing a movie after watching a trailer. It’s the reason sports highlight montages are so exciting. They seamlessly pack a ton of exciting moments into a single package, and Skyrim is the absolute master of this. Everything in the game is built around the central goal of making you and your character feel like you’re part of a truly epic adventure.

Just watch this trailer and try not to be psyched:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QpvM9uwOcUc

Whew, even just watching that trailer gets me jazzed to fire up Skyrim again when I get home. It gives me the vibe of feeling like you’re in one of the Lord of the Rings movies, except more badass. That’s just the trailer though, surely when you get into the game fighting a dragon won’t be that exciting. Yes, it is. The first few times feel just as exciting, mostly because they do something very smart, they ramp up the music. Every time you encounter a dragon the music swells up into full dragon-fight mode, and man it gets me going.

So there’s dragons, everyone knows that about Skyrim, and it is in itself plenty of reason to check out this game. The reason the dragon fights remain exciting, though, is because they happen sparingly, suddenly, and without warning. In the time in between dragon attacks is filled with literally hundreds of hours of gameplay. From questing to crafting to exploring, or modding (oh modding. I’ll get into that later) there is always more meaningful gameplay to do.


Guards keep asking me to brew them an ale, but at this pace it looks like I’ll be making them a Caesar.

I included exploring in the list of things to do, which a lot of people would roll their eyes at, but it really is a gameplay element in itself. This is one of the first games that has a fast travel system that at times I’ve decided to stop using entirely because it was so much more fun to just walk to my destination. The world is immense and totally open. If you can see it, you can probably walk to it. There’s no “track”, there are no invisible walls. The entire world is free to roam, and it is breathtakingly beautiful, and active. A simple walk from one town to another might result in a fight with a bear (which at some points can be just as deadly as a dragon) or a fight between a bear and a troll, or a fight between a dragon and the entire population of a village. The world is alive around you, and it is stunning!


For a town that snows 300 days a year and is full of unapologetic racists, Windhelm sure is pretty!

The game isn’t without its flaws. It’s definitely very buggy. Many of the bugs are by now pretty famous. For example, if you walk up to a shopkeeper and put a bucket on his head, he is effectively blind. You are then free to rob him…..blind, all while he contently sits there beneath his new headwear. Most of these bugs aren’t game-breaking (although some come pretty close) and to some degree they are excusable considering the free reign of this huge world Skyrim gives you access to. All this without me having even mentioned the mods.

Full disclosure, I have put just over 300 hours into Skyrim according to my Steam counter. If I’m being completely honest, it wouldn’t be far fetched for me to estimate that I’ve put another 100 hours or so into screwing around with mods for the game. You can mod ANYTHING. If you can see it, it can and has been modded. There are tons of small things like giving all the vendors in the game a bit more money on hand (the stock version of the game gives the vendors so little it’s almost impossible to sell high value items to any of them) and can range all the way up to massive overhauls of the entire weather system of the game, collections of hundreds of sets of weapons and armor, and a total re-writing of the lighting physics for the game.


Even though it’s two years old, my fully modded Skyrim taxes my PC easily more than any game I own.

There’s just so much to do here. The game has become a completionist’s nightmare and a procrastinator’s black hole. In my aforementioned 300 hours in the game, I’ve hardly put a dent in all the things there are to do in this game, and I’m not talking about grabbing all the trophies or collectibles or anything like that. I’m talking about entire major storylines that I haven’t yet touched because the game gives you the freedom to just take off in any direction and do things in almost any order you want.

I keep creating characters with the idea that they’ll be the one with whom I do everything Skyrim has to offer, but there’s too much. I end up leaving the game for a few weeks, coming back, and deciding I can create a better character. It’s been so much fun though, so who cares.


What? Oh that’s just me fighting a dragon in front of a stone statue, while wearing armor made of dragon bones, holding a sword made of magic energy, while I’m on fire. No biggie.

Watch the skies, traveler.

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BubblegumHeart

Review BubblegumHeart 5/5 · Oct 6, 2013

I used to underestimate this game, and then I took an arrow in the-- Nope. Not gonna go there.

But I actually did underestimate this game once upon a time, and for some reason avoided it despite all the hype. I just thought that it wouldn't be a game that I would enjoy, really. But recently I picked up the …

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I used to underestimate this game, and then I took an arrow in the-- Nope. Not gonna go there.

But I actually did underestimate this game once upon a time, and for some reason avoided it despite all the hype. I just thought that it wouldn't be a game that I would enjoy, really. But recently I picked up the Legendary edition, and my first playthrough lasted almost 24 hours. I was appalled by how addictive this game is. The scale of the world and the infinite possibilities. There's just so much to DO that it's impossible to ever get bored of this game.

I'll admit, by the time I got further in the game I started using console commands. I just couldn't resist. When it comes to games I usually am not a fan of challenge and if there's cheats, I'd use em. So I used the "coc qasmoke" command--which transports you to a special room that Bethesda made, and that room contains every single item in the game--and made my character one overpowered bitch, and I used the command that learns every spell. And I also use god mode to boot. #iRegretNothing

And then of course there are the mods. Thanks to several graphic mods my game now looks ten times more incredible, even though my PC has to suffer a little bit because of it. But it's a price I don't mind paying, cause all the mods I've downloaded so far have enhanced the experience greatly. And they really make my character a lot prettier, too. She sorta looks like a bustier Lightning from Final Fantasy XIII now.

I've been playing this game for quite a while now and I'm pretty sure there's still so much for me to explore. If there are maybe some of you out there who were like me, on-edge about getting the game, I highly suggest you do. It's addictive as hell.

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