HIGH Excellent worldbuilding. Engaging combat. Fantastic art direction.
LOW Frequent crashes and freezes, slow loading screens. Sparse, unpopulated areas.
WTF The way Vrann says “faces” sounds an awful lot like “feces.”
HIGH Excellent worldbuilding. Engaging combat. Fantastic art direction.
LOW Frequent crashes and freezes, slow loading screens. Sparse, unpopulated areas.
WTF The way Vrann says “faces” sounds an awful lot like “feces.”
HIGH Exploring an open world that was made with passion and densely packed with content.
LOW Some bugs, old and new, rear their ugly heads.
WTF Why are the atronachs so hot?
While GameCritics will soon post a full review of The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered, the good people at Bethesda were kind enough to supply a code specifically to test out this rework on Playstation 5 Pro. Surely Sony’s beefy machine will have no problems running a gussied-up eighteen-year-old game?
HIGH effective world-building and imaginative game design.
LOW Gameplay and visuals lack variety. Some pretty egregious bugs.
WTF money floating around waiting to be pilfered is truly the stuff of fantasy.
The storyline for the High Isle addition primarily revolves around a shady group of deviants known as the Ascendant Order. They’re a secretive bunch of rogues with an eye on overthrowing the ruling classes of Bretonnia and grant freedom to the common people… but, naturally, it doesn’t look like that’s the whole story.
When it was first announced at E3 2015, Elder Scrolls Legends was given just a few moments before the show moved on. And so did most people. This quick fade seemed to happen by design, as Bethesda went mostly radio silent after announcing it. I had almost forgotten about the game entirely until I started hearing people talk about how Legends was trying to be something different, rather than just Hearthstone: The Elder Scrolls Edition.