unless you already played it for a few hundred hours and want something new.
superkret@feddit.org 5 weeks ago
To be fair, Skyrim still holds up today.
acosmichippo@lemmy.world 5 weeks ago
superkret@feddit.org 5 weeks ago
To be fair, Skyrim still holds up today.
unless you already played it for a few hundred hours and want something new.
PunchingWood@lemmy.world 5 weeks ago
Yeah, but not thanks to Bethesda though.
Rider@eviltoast.org 5 weeks ago
True, but Bethesda not only embraced modders with open arms—they encouraged them! You can’t say the same for most other game devs; the majority either ignore modders like they’re pests or, worse, are outright hostile towards them.
catloaf@lemm.ee 5 weeks ago
Well except for that part where the native mod tools suck ass and every creation club update breaks a bunch of mods
ICastFist@programming.dev 5 weeks ago
Their “open arms” has felt like a vampiric embrace for almost a decade now, because they would really, really, really prefer if modders released stuff via their club, where modders can get money and they also get a slice for free.
The bigger PC names of the 90s and early 2000s were all welcoming to modding, with some games shipping with the “official editor tools” for anyone to mess around with (UT99 and Warcraft 3 come to mind)
BigBananaDealer@lemm.ee 5 weeks ago
this doesnt make any sense at all. they made the game
crapwittyname@lemm.ee 5 weeks ago
But it holds up thanks to the mods that are available for it now. Mods which are all developed by not-Bethesda. Vanilla Skyrim doesn’t hold up in 2024, modded Skyrim does.
BigBananaDealer@lemm.ee 5 weeks ago
really? hmm weird, because 95% of my playthroughs are unmodded, and i still play it regularly. i would be extremely shocked if im the only one in the world not using mods
and hell, before mods were on consoles there were STILL plenty of people playing it
icecreamtaco@lemmy.world 5 weeks ago
I played it vanilla first time in 2022 and it was amazing