Wild Hunt Elder Scrolls
The Elder Scrolls: Skyrim is the latest entry in the legendary Elder Scrolls series. Wild Hunt, stick to Fallout 3, Fallout: New Vegas, and Fallout 4. While The Witcher 3 takes place in Medieval times, Fallout games take place in post-nuclear war era. It appears that there is no similarity between these two franchises, but they share more.
I spent last 4 years in frozen wonderland of Skyrim,i still enjoy fighting Thalmor,vampires,stormcloacks,rieklings and other abominations in Skyrim,i still enjoy roaming throught the Skyrim and capturing moments of beauty and perfection. I also enjoy in Skyrim theme music made by malukah. For me,Skyrim isn't just a common game,it's part of my life.But everything has to end sooner or later. Within next 100 hours,ill most likely finish campaign again and i'll exhaust all interest i had in aviable mods.It's time to decide which game will be my new Skyrim,and most attractive choice to me is Witcher.1. How reccomendable is to play Witcher 2 before playing Witcher 3. I heard if you compare Witcher 2 and 3,it's like you compare Citroen and Mercedes-Benz,but im curious if stories are connected?2. For me,Bethesda is well known for creating amazing games full of bugs.
Ash Piles is one of most annoying things i encountered in my entire 1 hour of Skyrim,you could encounter 1 bug,error or glitch of some sort. Is Witcher also full of bugs?3. My new PC is coming soon. It will most likely contain 1070. How beautiful is Witcher compared to Skyrim?4.
How many missions Witcher 3 have. More or less than Skyrim?5.
How big is world in Witcher?6. Is Witcher 3 also replayable game like Skyrim? You ask a lot of questions. I'll try my best to answer them all.1. Witcher 2 is very connected to Witcher 3 but you do NOT need to have played W2 in order to understand what's happening in W3, although it does help broaden it for you.2.
For myself, I can't speak for others, I've encountered NO bugs in over 180 hours of playtime. Not 1 crash, not 1 stall, not 1 hiccup.
Game plays amazingly well.3. It blows Skyrim out of the water. TW3, fully cranked to Ultra, is one of the most beautiful games you'll ever play.4. Lots more than Skryim. Like, a LOT more. I'm not sure what the exact count is but many missions are also repeatable.
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Even after beating the main story line you can keep doing what you would like to do in the world.5. The world of TW3 is about 4x bigger than Skryim.6. Very replayable. I'm still in my first run through. I've got 180 hours + (currently play it on GOG) and I've not yet beat the main quest or the DLC main quests, although I do own them all. Saying that, there is a LOT of replayability in the game. Different upgrade paths to go down if you so choose.
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Lots of different variants to add to a new playthrough. TW3 is most definitely a game that you'll play for many, many years to come.Hope I answered your questions for you. In all honesty, if you loved Skyrim, you'll be blown away by The Witcher 3. It's easily, hands down, the absolute BEST RPG I've played in 35 years of gaming. CDPR is also, bar none, the best developer gamers could have ever asked for.I will also say this.
TW1 and TW2 are just as worthy of your time. While TW1 is rough around the edges a little, TW2 is a phenomenal game also. Messaggio originale di DocGangrena:I spent last 4 years in frozen wonderland of Skyrim,i still enjoy fighting Thalmor,vampires,stormcloacks,rieklings and other abominations in Skyrim,i still enjoy roaming throught the Skyrim and capturing moments of beauty and perfection. I also enjoy in Skyrim theme music made by malukah. For me,Skyrim isn't just a common game,it's part of my life.But everything has to end sooner or later.
Within next 100 hours,ill most likely finish campaign again and i'll exhaust all interest i had in aviable mods.It's time to decide which game will be my new Skyrim,and most attractive choice to me is Witcher.1. How reccomendable is to play Witcher 2 before playing Witcher 3.
I heard if you compare Witcher 2 and 3,it's like you compare Citroen and Mercedes-Benz,but im curious if stories are connected?2. For me,Bethesda is well known for creating amazing games full of bugs. Ash Piles is one of most annoying things i encountered in my entire 1 hour of Skyrim,you could encounter 1 bug,error or glitch of some sort. Is Witcher also full of bugs?3. My new PC is coming soon. It will most likely contain 1070.
How beautiful is Witcher compared to Skyrim?4. How many missions Witcher 3 have. More or less than Skyrim?5.
How big is world in Witcher?6. Is Witcher 3 also replayable game like Skyrim?I wouldn't worry too much about comparing the two games. With the latest expansion, Blood and Wine, the lines are so blurred, it won't matter at all. No need to play the previous games, theres a few references you won't get but thats about it2. Encountered 1 crash and 0 bugs in 157 hours so far3. I thinks its more beautiful than a modded skyrim, however modded skyrim is realistic whereas TW3 has a different art style.
Nevertheless its still the most beautiful game i've ever played.4. Alot more, alot more varied, alot more mature stories, and the side quests are fully fledged mini stories, i think i've had 1 or 2 fetch quests, one of which turned into someone alot bigger.5. About 3-4x bigger than skyrim6. Many different choices in nearly every quest. There are so many multiple endings that its hard to get the same one.Do it, you'll love it dude:).
No bugs captain, worlds about the same size really, skyrim might have more missions but witcher has more memorable one and it's not exactly short on them either. You don't have to play witcher 2 before 3, I certainly didn't after reading the plot synopsis. Witcher 3 is certainly replayable, as it has a few different endings based on your actions during the game.Play witcher if you like story and atmosphere. If you like combat don't play either. Seriously, tolerable is about the best thing I can say about witcher combat. Though seeing an enemy's torso explode in gore after tossing a bomb is great fun.
If you've managed to trudge through Skyrim you ought to do just fine though. Messaggio originale di:One more thing.Witcher 3 might be first game in my life which im gonna pay more than 20 €(my most expensive game). Will it be succesful investment? In all my years,there are only few games that i can say they are worth of their full price. Those games are Life is Strange,Elder Scrolls Skyrim,Fallout 3,New Vegas (and prolly i believe 4 too),Lost Planet 2.Will Witcher deserve place on this imaginary list of mine?By those standards, probably.It is a pretty massive game, I've done only one playthrough (including both expansions) and I've just passed the 200 hour mark. I'd say it's definetely a bang for your buck no doubt, but as always, it always comes down to personal taste. I'd advise you not to look for something similar to Skyrim in this game, they are completely different beasts in their on right, both doing things greatly that the other may not do so well.
With that being said, TW3 and Skyrim both reasily fall into some of my most liked games of the current decade, they are both, overall, and in my opinion, great experiences, with TW3 appealing more to my tastes and being a journey I'll remember more fondly in the future.
The Elder Scrolls VI is set to be one of the biggest RPGs of the next generation. There are still millions of people playing The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim as it is, so it’s unlikely that the next game in the fantasy-RPG series won’t be as popular, if not more so.Of course, Skyrim is helped along by it being released on practically every electronic device ever made, not to mention the many mods that either improve it or make it much sillier than the team at Bethesda intended it to be. Who can forget the mod that turns all the dragons into Thomas the Tank Engine?If you’re not an Elder Scrolls fan you can always try one of the other.
But wouldn’t it be great if we don’t need to install mods to sharpen it up when arrives? Bethesda has a reputation for releasing buggy games and ones that also rely too much on repetition. With that in mind, we decided to give Bethesda a helping hand, looking to the other massive RPG series and seeing what The Elder Scrolls VI could learn from it. Yes, we’re talking about The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt. Proper relationshipsOne of the highlights of The Witcher 3 is the you form with its cast.
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The combination of terrific dialogue and expressive gestures, discussion of complicated emotions, and the drastic consequences of your decisions make the characters feel alive. It helps that you carry a history with Yennefer, Dandelion, and Triss over all three Witcher games, their personalities fully developed into independent people recognisable by their passions, talents, and the mistakes they make.Characters in Skyrim, however, are often voiced by the same few actors, and those you get closest to are your followers. This includes the likes of Lydia, Uthgerd, and Farkas, who mostly serve as an extra blade or bow at your side, and repeat the same voice lines as if they’re on a timer.What we’d love to see The Elder Scrolls VI do is give us proper interactions with characters, let us get close and form a bond with them, not just have them carry our items or give us quests. Rich landscapesWith the exception of Morrowind, the Elder Scrolls series has struggled to supply variation across its locations. Think of Oblivion and you’ll probably imagine stone cities and hilly grasslands. Skyrim is much the same except it’s covered in snow.
Even the dungeons repeat the same textures and traps, and you’ll struggle to find a story within them to mix it up, unless that dungeon is tied to a larger quest.The Witcher 3 showed us how an open world can be realised with not only a range of different environments, but unique cultures and stories to find within them. The vast city of Novigrad contrasts with the snowy mountains of Skellige, and little else in the game matches the eerie power of the.Beyond the broad strokes, The Witcher impresses on the micro level too, with each texture and natural formation in the environment made distinctive, from the authentic to populated huts and castles. Given that The Elder Scrolls VI will be launching on next-gen consoles that should mean Bethesda has more freedom to provide a world as rich as The Witcher 3’s. Every quest mattersSomething as small as a missing frying pan is turned into an entertaining story in The Witcher 3.
The reason being that the writers at CD Projekt Red understand that isn’t the experience points it gives you but how it enriches the world and even the most minor characters within it. Most important is that you can tell as much thought has been put into the secondary quests in The Witcher 3 as has been put into the main ones.But, in the Elder Scrolls, the glut of quests means that many of them fall into a dull template. You are often hunting down an item, clearing an area of monsters, or assassinating a character. It doesn’t help that many of the quest locations feel like (or actually are) copy-pasted from elsewhere in the game. The secondary quests in The Elder Scrolls are ‘painting by numbers’ whereas The Witcher 3’s feel literary and gives you new insight into its world. Refined combatbut there’s no denying the work that has been put into it by CD Projekt Red.
Fighting as Geralt or Ciri is refined, with each swing of the sword slicing with finesse, the animations of Geralt dodging his enemies gives a sense of weight and peril to each encounter.Combat in the Elder Scrolls series has a tendency to feel clumsy. Blades and blunt weapons pass through enemies with little friction and casting magic is displayed as nothing more than a fist opening. Part of this is due to Bethesda having to design everything for first-person and third-person perspectives, which puts limits on the animations.What also doesn’t help is Bethesda’s focus on supplying lots of weapons whereas The Witcher 3 has only a handful of blades for you to worry about. Where you can better customise your loadout is with the magical signs witchers use to create space on the battlefield or ignite enemies. Even the pre-fight preparation helps to vary it up, as you must gather oils for your blades to fight certain beasts, and brew enough potions to help you take on tougher enemies.The addition of blood splatters, dragon shouts, and slow-mo death scenes in Skyrim were significant improvements to an area the series has struggled with.
So, hopefully, The Elder Scrolls VI will have its own share of upgrades. Bethesda should focus on refining the systems and animations, keeping the number of them small in the interest of quality, rather than trying to give as many combat options as possible. MinigamesSome of the most popular Skyrim mods add tavern games. Then there are the forums in which people give each other challenges to complete within Skyrim’s world. This makes it pretty obvious that The Elder Scrolls is missing something: minigames.The Witcher 3’s own minigame, has proven popular enough to see it turned into a standalone game.
It even has proper tournaments with players competing for thousands of dollars in prizes.Bethesda has already created its own card game in The Elder Scrolls: Legends, so it would make sense to include it in some form in The Elder Scrolls VI – we all need some downtime. It worked for The Witcher 3 so there’s no reason why a card game with in-game tournaments couldn’t be part of The Elder Scrolls VI. Anything beyond a card game would also be appreciated as an additional pastime – The Witcher 3 had a brawling competition and horse races, for instance.