It's Skyrim's 4-year milestone this year!
It's Skyrim's 4-year milestone this year!
Huzzah! It seems I’m mostly stuck in mods, making up about half the fun. Yet I’m still a newbie with under 500 hours. All this began after I saw a screenshot of someone with great textures and thought my game could look better too.
according to steam for me, it didn't record like 100% of my hours so I only have 250 ish in reality I played the game for a month straight w/o turning my PC off a lot of modded content is introduced the day I went to Nexus... like I had 50+ish mods installed, the regular story is so meh edit: forgot I bought GOTY and Skyrim two times each because it was such a good game *for me and for a friend*
Those who played Skyrim for "killer" style gameplay must feel like reality is returning to them. The game never promised exceptional gameplay; its strength lies in storytelling and lore. That’s definitely there in plenty. Yet, some individuals naturally gravitate toward trends. Initially they adored it, but now as opinions shift, they dislike it too. Absurd!
What about the second GOTY version? Don’t worry, I missed the final line!
I just enjoy Skyrim mainly because of the mods available; I don’t like the original version.
It's hard to understand why some folks have such a negative view of Fallout 4 and Skyrim. These are the only games I enjoy, aside from CS:GO and GTA V when I'm really frustrated.
I used to own a decent PC when Skyrim first came out. I purchased it for the 360 and spent well over 400 hours playing through it. That’s right—more than four hours into the game on a console. Sadly, once every quest was done and every dungeon explored, I grew tired of the experience. When I finally got it back on PC, I spent a lot more time customizing it rather than enjoying the original content. Steam lists about 140 hours of playtime in Skyrim, but I can assure you that over 100 of those were spent installing and testing mods. I even missed out on playing any of the mods I installed, such as Moonpath, Falskaar, and Wyrmstooth.