Why is There no Other Game Like Skyrim?

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2021
  • support pls 🥺🥺🥺: / chromerot
    The Elder Scrolls V is possibly the most popular RPG title of all time. During the past decade, Skyrim has been a staple in the gaming world, among open world RPG fans but also millions of casual gamers. I consider the lovechild of Todd Howard to be Bethesda's crowning achievement, and in this Skyrim Review/Analysis I try to explain why, 10 years later. This Skyrim Video Essay has been something I've wanted to make for a while, to go against the popular opinion of Skyrim being a shallow experience and explore why the beautiful atmosphere of Skyrim has not been recreated since, and why it’s likely that we will not get a game like Skyrim until Bethesda releases Elder Scrolls VI (6).
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Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @chromerot
    @chromerot  2 года назад +541

    feel like tossing a few coins my way? www.patreon.com/chromerot
    wow youtube compression really didn't do this one any favors
    first upload in about 3 years, hi
    wanted to make this video because I miss being able to get lost in a game, looking up youtube videos about it and discovering tons of hidden secrets. been a while since a game felt so vast and full of content.

    • @Y0PPS
      @Y0PPS 2 года назад +7

      You're my favorite video ese

    • @chromerot
      @chromerot  2 года назад +10

      @@Y0PPS yes im video ese

    • @SubconsciousLight
      @SubconsciousLight 2 года назад +6

      oooh sht u have no idea how much i enjoyed video, thank you!

    • @jacobpinson2834
      @jacobpinson2834 2 года назад +1

      The witness does that for people who like puzzle games, but doesn't have the thing you mention skyrim having where if you aren't a nerd for the genre you can still enjoy it (which I think you can do with the witness but people who aren't into puzzle games often don't know how to manage when and what to look up with the witness)

    • @Y0PPS
      @Y0PPS 2 года назад +1

      @@jacobpinson2834 I really enjoyed my time with the witness. Totally understand your point though!

  • @pratikn60
    @pratikn60 2 года назад +9750

    To put it simply, the game feels like it has a soul. It's janky, it has a ton of issues but all of that feels insignificant when you're actually playing it.

    • @graalcloud
      @graalcloud 2 года назад +153

      I don't really think it feels like that though. Maybe it's just me, but the game was boring and uninspired, and I couldn't suspend my disbelief of the fantasy world because the art design was on the poor side--for instance I thought the dragons looked kind of stupid.

    • @bennyweimer2345
      @bennyweimer2345 2 года назад +225

      @@graalcloud mods ma dude (assuming you have a decent pc)

    • @youtubesbichasspolicys5888
      @youtubesbichasspolicys5888 2 года назад +331

      Everyone shits on wow as well for stupid reasons but for what it is and how much content and Easter eggs are in it is never ending.
      Did you notice the prisoner running away at the start of Skyrim always gets hit in the knee by the arrow?

    • @Lightmakerslife
      @Lightmakerslife 2 года назад +7

      Need this on stadia like frfr

    • @copyninja8756
      @copyninja8756 2 года назад +13

      @@youtubesbichasspolicys5888 no

  • @vmedei
    @vmedei Год назад +3890

    "There is something missing when a RPG dosent allow me to be a thief". That is absolutely true

    • @bushmanphotos
      @bushmanphotos Год назад +35

      it is the one aspect I hate the most and I never do it but that's just me

    • @kemp3746
      @kemp3746 Год назад +114

      @@bushmanphotoshow can u hate thieves guild and being able to steal everything?

    • @metracxx
      @metracxx Год назад +14

      That's true, that's what I don't like about ghost of tsushima, because it's 'not supposed to be playes like that'

    • @raghudurina2354
      @raghudurina2354 Год назад +33

      Thats why I love kingdom come

    • @Cangaca777
      @Cangaca777 Год назад +13

      The only bad thing about Skyrim is Bethesda... they kinda killed their own products..

  • @trevormason3825
    @trevormason3825 Год назад +985

    I am 31, I had Morrowind, I had Oblivion and fell in love with it, but when Skyrim came out, I played it so so so so so much. Now, 11 years later, I still play it, on every system I have. It is still the greatest game ever made, here in April 2023

    • @musestarlight1
      @musestarlight1 Год назад +24

      Agreed brother 💯 the perfect game to get lost in

    • @sashank224
      @sashank224 Год назад +11

      Man transdented higher than love. Nostalgia now. Magical then. Skyrim touches soul.

    • @LueBeckham
      @LueBeckham Год назад +9

      I was in 8th grade when it came out. I remember how fascinated I was watching my older brother play and inevitably starting a file myself. Now at 25 I started a new file a couple of weeks ago, and can attest the magic never leaves. Playing a two handed file for the first time and loving it lol

    • @Dutchy4564
      @Dutchy4564 11 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@musestarlight1it's hit or miss. For me it hit like a truck

    • @frederiklarsen1494
      @frederiklarsen1494 11 месяцев назад +3

      Yes, but the only issue I can complain about, is the bug that causes you to always end up as a sneak character (in the long run)

  • @cassynedelisky796
    @cassynedelisky796 10 месяцев назад +221

    Skyrim was the first video game that I played as an adult. It was magical to me. I’ve never gotten so lost in a world before.

    • @mralias225
      @mralias225 4 месяца назад +6

      this. exactly because the game doesnt tell you to do this or do that, it just says play it

    • @ThePreciousSalad
      @ThePreciousSalad Месяц назад +1

      I envy you and feel bad for you at the same time. Having Skyrim be your first game played has gotta be such an unbeatable experience, yet also must ruin every other video game for you now 😅

  • @shapescolours8105
    @shapescolours8105 Год назад +1969

    Skyrim has always made me feel nostalgic for a life I never had.

  • @chandyboi2976
    @chandyboi2976 2 года назад +1450

    The best thing about skyrim is the music! Just walking around at night in a forest to the ambience is an experience by itself.

    • @andrelopes4988
      @andrelopes4988 Год назад +59

      Then the "Secunda" song hits...

    • @moonknight1331
      @moonknight1331 Год назад +21

      True! My favourite one is "Far Horizons"

    • @lolitaras22
      @lolitaras22 Год назад +11

      One of the game music ever made

    • @luischufox4650
      @luischufox4650 Год назад +3

      @@lolitaras22 fr

    • @Pumkin932
      @Pumkin932 Год назад +8

      I cannot say how many times I have listened to some of the Skyrim Music and Ambience on here before bed or throughout the day. Check out the rainy tavern or rainy night ones. So good.

  • @Ayawokayy
    @Ayawokayy Год назад +298

    Crazy how you didn’t mention the random encounters which makes every new character you start unique, they keep you interested in the world and make it feel truly alive, I have seen a dragon fighting a giant with 3 Sabre cats and a group of bandits.

    • @AntonioGonzalez-ht5ck
      @AntonioGonzalez-ht5ck Год назад +13

      Amazing and ground breaking, a rpg with random encounters? Fucking mind blown

    • @respectableindividual4593
      @respectableindividual4593 11 месяцев назад +55

      ​@@AntonioGonzalez-ht5ckme when im annoying:

    • @nawyuhuurd8519
      @nawyuhuurd8519 11 месяцев назад +34

      ​@@AntonioGonzalez-ht5ckme when im absolutely fucking miserable

    • @coleG112
      @coleG112 10 месяцев назад +3

      The only other game I was able to have a similar set of “wildlife encounters” like Skyrim was Horizon Zero Dawn. I don’t mean that as “no one else does it” but only because I will never forget with I had two Thunderjaws fighting each other because I possessed one of them.

    • @Lofirainbows
      @Lofirainbows 9 месяцев назад

      It ruins the immersion, taking me out of it, not inhabiting it they're very played out; sane outcome everytime

  • @techniek3422
    @techniek3422 Год назад +217

    Yes man the ambience in this game is next level. Jeremy Soule's soundtrack was so otherworldly influential for me, that it's the reason I started learning an instrument (piano) almost solely because of it.

    • @georgie9303
      @georgie9303 11 месяцев назад +5

      Too bad he was a sexual harasser

    • @DM-nw5lu
      @DM-nw5lu 11 месяцев назад +5

      @georgie9303 Yeah.. I sometimes forget about it while playing and just get lost in the atmosphere.. then I remember and lose some of my faith in humanity. How can someone who creates such beauty be such a piece of absolute garbage? I even taught myself some of the Oblivion (first TES I played) soundtrack on piano.. haven't played them in years. Just feels off.

    • @S0L12D3
      @S0L12D3 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@DM-nw5luget over it. Or you won’t enjoy anything in life. It’s all lies

    • @DM-nw5lu
      @DM-nw5lu 10 месяцев назад +7

      @@S0L12D3 I have certain moral principles I like adhering to. So no, thank you. I won't "get over it". Sexual assault and abuse of authority are things I do not tolerate. The women that came forwards against this POS had literally nothing to gain from it. They did not ask for money. They just wanted the truth to be out there. So there's not a single reason for me to assume they were lying.

    • @S0L12D3
      @S0L12D3 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@DM-nw5lu you might as well get used to it. Literally every single majorly production (film, game, etc..) they were all made at least partly by creeps. Name and of your favorite shows or movies and I can easily point out a sex offender or someone who did something illegal

  • @Krondon-SSR
    @Krondon-SSR 2 года назад +957

    It was also cool to learn that Bethesda makes the soundtrack first so the artist get the feeling of the game while creating

    • @cjgreen4331
      @cjgreen4331 2 года назад +108

      that's extremely interesting, that just makes me like the game more

    • @djoeneh
      @djoeneh 2 года назад +1

      Isn’t he in jail for unwanted snoo snoo?

    • @Krondon-SSR
      @Krondon-SSR 2 года назад +17

      @@djoeneh every artist and dev at Bethesda?

    • @GoinAllOut
      @GoinAllOut 2 года назад

      Incredible

    • @jasonfurumetarualkemisto5917
      @jasonfurumetarualkemisto5917 2 года назад +10

      @@djoeneh
      He just got accused and nothing came of it. I'm pretty sure it was just a fake me-too moment.
      Especially since the lady who accused him stated in said accusation that she asked him how he gets inspired to make his music (it's weird and sexual but it's not exactly sexual assault)

  • @melma2753
    @melma2753 2 года назад +1376

    That magical moment, when you escape Alduin and make it out of Helgen, and look up at the open world of Skyrim for the very first time.... Man, it still gives me goosebumps to think about. Over 10 years later and i have 4000+ hours played. What i wouldnt give to experience it all over again, for the first time.

    • @hazardeur
      @hazardeur 2 года назад +45

      simply magical. have played since it came out and never can stray too long from it. When I do, it always feels like i'm visiting my distant relatives when i come back lol

    • @DrRodox.
      @DrRodox. 2 года назад +2

      I never played it. The question that keeps coming to my head is: Maybe playing now a game that is that old will not give me the same experience that it would have if i've played it when it appears, you know?
      Its like Uncharted, i played all 4 in a roll last year. It was undeniable that the newer realeased i played, the better it got. With the uncharted 4 being one of the best games i've ever played in my life.

    • @mixofgamez1724
      @mixofgamez1724 2 года назад +17

      @@DrRodox. only one way to find out give it a try especially with the new dlc that they added to it over the years. The game is has it glitches but for the time and consoles that it was made for the game is a master piece.

    • @kingshawukee
      @kingshawukee 2 года назад +6

      @@DrRodox. I recommend playing it 👍

    • @meowcat5596
      @meowcat5596 2 года назад +3

      It's not that good

  • @charlessandgren8646
    @charlessandgren8646 10 месяцев назад +25

    One of the reason that the feeling of playing Skyrim stands out from any other game I’ve played, is the fact that I literally feel like I’m IN the world walking around and experiencing everything as me. The dynamic landscape, the camera and the ambience makes me feel like I’m ACTUALLY inside the tv lol, and every adventure I actually experienced for real. The freedom of the world keeps me surprised and laugh and get scared like it was almost real life moments. When I played games like DA afterwards (which I also love btw) I don’t get that in the same way, I always remember I’m more so still just playing a game thats pre-planned and limited to some degree.

  • @HenrikoMagnifico
    @HenrikoMagnifico 8 месяцев назад +72

    It's the ambience that really sells it for me. The music, the art direction, the lighting. It's all amazing

  • @TheSleepiestPlurals
    @TheSleepiestPlurals 2 года назад +1714

    a big reason why Skyrim works is its consistency in tone. I heard an interview where Todd Howard explained that his entire job during skyrim was going to different departments and writers and making sure the tone stays consistent throughout. The result is everything in Skyrim feels like it belongs in Skyrim, from the voice acting to the side quests to the visual design of every single object, it all just feels cohesive and consistent

    • @hazardeur
      @hazardeur 2 года назад +145

      and i love the guy for making sure it got done like that. i understand why many people dislike him and/or bethesdays tactics but it doesn't matter to me. He was a part of skyrim development and that means he's a legend in my book.

    • @Dagoth_Ur_1
      @Dagoth_Ur_1 2 года назад +53

      True, one thing I love about it is how violent/gritty it is. Oblivion looked like bloody Shrek lol with it's squeaky clean characters and rolling hills

    • @TheSleepiestPlurals
      @TheSleepiestPlurals 2 года назад +83

      @@Dagoth_Ur_1 I do like the Skyrim aesthetic a lot. I also feel like vanilla skyrim, before special edition, really achieved this sort of "cold" feeling visually, with crisp yet washed out colors. It really made you feel like you were hiking in the alps or something. I would often put warmer clothes on my character just cause the visuals almost made me shiver XD

    • @jacquelinehutchinson-farre8275
      @jacquelinehutchinson-farre8275 2 года назад +24

      This is a big thing for me. One of my favorite RPGs is Kingdom Come: Deliverance. Most of the voice acting is phenomenal, but there’s just too many characters who lack consistent pronunciation of other characters names. For instance, I had to spend an entire questline listening to some guy pronounce “Pope Pius” as “Pope Pee-us.” Hilarious, but immersion-destroying

    • @antipianist8652
      @antipianist8652 2 года назад +6

      Bravo! Consistency in tone!

  • @dandewizzle2479
    @dandewizzle2479 2 года назад +634

    I think Jeremy Soule's music is a huge part of why this game is so unique...the soundtrack in this game melds so perfectly with the tone, atmosphere, and setting of Skyrim that it would not be the same game without it. I love this soundtrack, one of my all time favorites, and one of my favorite memories of playing this game was exploring the tundra on the way to find Red Eagle's sword, and the music had this forlorn, sad choir playing in the background, and for some reason it just stuck with me

    • @AA-sw5pb
      @AA-sw5pb Год назад +7

      I mean you bassically same that same thing about oblivion and morrowind

    • @iOmgTom
      @iOmgTom Год назад +10

      Jeremy Soule is the goat. Was first introduced to his music through the original guild wars.

    • @toddfrombethesda6963
      @toddfrombethesda6963 Год назад

      @@iOmgTom to bad he’s a fuckwit scammer. Honestly the guy who’s doing the ESO I believe will do a sufficient job living up to Jeremy’s standards.

    • @ianvance1647
      @ianvance1647 Год назад +2

      tbh, as someone who got into gaming in 1987 but didn't play from 2006-2018, Skyrim feels really dated and not very fun... but the music is incredible. I play the game just so I can listen to the soundtrack in the background while doing checklist stuff and engaging in super awkward combat.

    • @dt5690
      @dt5690 Год назад +1

      Jeremy's music woked wonders in Guild Wars as well. Such an amazing composer.

  • @imp8453
    @imp8453 11 месяцев назад +29

    to this day, there are areas that i haven't gone to in Skyrim since 2011-2014 and i still actively play Skyrim at least once a month. its the weirdest feeling to have moved out, grown into an adult and to go into a place i haven't been in over a decade. it always makes me feel like I walked into my childhood home.

  • @MrYorchns
    @MrYorchns 8 месяцев назад +12

    This game changed my life. I don’t recall getting so invested in a fantasy world like Skyrim.

  • @xerosereify
    @xerosereify 2 года назад +839

    One little magical thing I love about skyrim is that you can just feel the little parts of it where an individual developers has had fun. Like you climb a mountain and find a generic skeleton with a love letter, a carrot, and an iron axe that has been renamed Bobs Axe in its inventory, with the whole scene having zero connections whatsoever to any actual quest. You can just tell someone who had the job of set dressing has been having fun spinning their own private story and it just feels very magical.

    • @caspra
      @caspra 2 года назад +85

      Something I came across the other day was a dead guy who was clearly crushed to death by a fallen tree… they named him Lucky Lorenz

    • @dantehoffstead9320
      @dantehoffstead9320 2 года назад +28

      @@caspra yes near the abandoned prison and it’s very ironic they named him “lucky”

    • @byronwolf8692
      @byronwolf8692 2 года назад +67

      I also love how they add clever jokes here and there, predicting what the player was gonna do or what they have done already. Or when you do something that's common in a game but would be questioned in real life. Like running towards a guard with swords out, normal games probably wouldn't care, but in skyrim the guard would say, "running at a guard with swords out, may make me a little jumpy" or quirky things like that.

    • @Dabombster342
      @Dabombster342 2 года назад

      @@caspra wow, I was gonna say that exact moment

    • @Dabombster342
      @Dabombster342 2 года назад +44

      @@byronwolf8692 I REALLY loved the little things that guards would say, it really brought them to life where as in other game the guards are just there to do a job and nothing else.
      such as when you're good at certain kinds of magic, they might say "maybe you could conjured me up a warm bed and some mead" or just "careful with those flames" such a small and simple thing really adds so much.

  • @jasongreen6826
    @jasongreen6826 Год назад +507

    I’ve replayed Skyrim like 10 times and every time I think I won’t be able to get back into it and I always end up clearing every quest line, it’s truly something else

    • @sgt.lincolnosiris4111
      @sgt.lincolnosiris4111 Год назад +10

      I'm on my 6th play thru and FINALLY got the windhelm house 😎

    • @msihcs8171
      @msihcs8171 Год назад +3

      @@sgt.lincolnosiris4111 I played the game at launch and quite a few times since, on my last playthrough I felt like a God even after cranking the difficulty up, I took it slow and did the quests right rather than my usual power level and quick travel everywhere so my character could one shot everything except a dragon (and a giant sometimes took 2 arrows)

    • @yngsl5498
      @yngsl5498 Год назад +3

      @@sgt.lincolnosiris4111 there’s a house in Windhelm!?

    • @geehammer1511
      @geehammer1511 Год назад +1

      @@yngsl5498 yeah almost every "city" in the game has a house we can get, not sure how you get the Windhelm house. Winterhold might be the only one where we don't get a house.

    • @Wft-bu5zc
      @Wft-bu5zc Год назад

      With most other games I have to take years long breaks before I'm able to get back into them again. With Skyrim it's only a few months. I'm able to get addicted again just a few months after my last playthrough. I can't figure out quite why, but I think it's the immersion and freedom that the game offers to do whatever you want. Also mods expand that even more.

  • @raypalmer5125
    @raypalmer5125 Год назад +61

    Anything that is popular will face a lot of criticism, but despite all that, every time I dive back in this game, it feels like a warm hug. It's not about the bullet points, the checklist of dialogue choices etc, the design of the this game that can't be objectively be measured is what makes this game so special to me.

  • @BT-oj1bn
    @BT-oj1bn Год назад +58

    Their early work was a little too new wave for my taste. But when Skyrim came out in '11, I think they really came into their own, commercially and artistically. The whole game has a clear, crisp sound, and a new sheen of consummate professionalism that really gives the gameplay a big boost. Its been compared to Final Famtasy, but I think Skyrim has a far more bitter, cynical sense of humor.

  • @caterinapas3386
    @caterinapas3386 2 года назад +604

    describing combat in skyrim as fighting in a dream is literally perfect, it's what i've always felt like but couldn't put into words

  • @rmortimer81
    @rmortimer81 Год назад +655

    The fact that I played this game for hundreds of hours and now both of my kids who are now late teens, have played many times over shows how enduring and relevant this game is

    • @call_me_mado5987
      @call_me_mado5987 Год назад +22

      Damn man, nice, you have cultured kids xd

    • @j.vincent3801
      @j.vincent3801 Год назад +5

      Wholesome

    • @ejokurirulezz
      @ejokurirulezz Год назад

      not really, people play games for thousands of hours, doesn't mean they're good games. it's called lack of experience. not experience of something good.

    • @Matty002
      @Matty002 Год назад +25

      ​@@ejokurirulezz your first statement is true but your second is illogical. if it was true logically nobody would know if something was good or not because we arent born experienced. youre basically saying i cant know i think chocolate is amazing because i didnt know what it tastes like before i ever had it

    • @SpaceHCowboy
      @SpaceHCowboy 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@ejokurirulezzand people also have opinions.

  • @googly311
    @googly311 11 месяцев назад +41

    Not to mention, this game got me through the past decade. I get transported to another world when I play this game

    • @googly311
      @googly311 5 месяцев назад

      @@UlfhednarAxe not quite like Skyrim did, cool guy.

  • @wisewizard9552
    @wisewizard9552 Год назад +17

    My very memorable moment of Skyrim was seeing the inside of Tower of Mzark. With all the spining mechanisms and the control pannel. I was so mesmerized by that!

  • @claycollins9852
    @claycollins9852 Год назад +902

    I was born in 78. I played all the elder scrolls games. I wore out Morrowind. I played the hell out of Oblivion. But Skyrim, whole another level. Skyrim is my favorite game ever.

    • @makaiokalahama
      @makaiokalahama Год назад +27

      I was born in 88, but Morrowind is still my favourite of the series.

    • @Tia-Louisa
      @Tia-Louisa Год назад +13

      I'm 78 too. Remember 007 and Diablo back in the day lol. Graphics have come a long way.

    • @chaselane8034
      @chaselane8034 Год назад +16

      I dare say Morrowind was the best in many ways. Im only 23

    • @bounty_hunter19
      @bounty_hunter19 Год назад +2

      BEST COMMENT EVER

    • @StukkoChonies
      @StukkoChonies Год назад +8

      I was born on 93, Morrowind was on original Xbox when I was a kid and blew my mind away. It was different than all those original Xbox games. Bethesda really has a formula and they have for a long time.

  • @cottoncandyaddict
    @cottoncandyaddict 2 года назад +298

    I started playing when my oldest son was a toddler. Do you know how cool it is all these years later to watch all my sons play Skyrim and do their own things their own way? We each have our own Skyrim, mine is on the Switch for Mom-convenience, my middle kid uses a PS4 and my oldest has a PC. It was cute the first time I heard “I’m going to be a stealth archer!” and “Should I join the Companions?” And of course my oldest got into all the mods and overhauled the game just to see, whereas I like to play as vanilla and basic as possible lol. It’s just such a playable and immersive game, even my youngest will sit next to me for an hour straight just watching me run around trying to find all the locations I can to fill out the map. It’s truly my favorite game of all time just because of the years of memories it gave me and my kids

    • @DrBell-gi7bf
      @DrBell-gi7bf 2 года назад +20

      I literally just left a comment about how this game is trans-generational. Long live Skyrim

    • @quothh3631
      @quothh3631 Год назад +5

      adorable

    • @delyseonduty
      @delyseonduty Год назад +6

      This is so wholesome

    • @thalmoragent9344
      @thalmoragent9344 Год назад +2

      This definitely sounds like a great time, amazing experience for you guys 👍🏾

    • @Coronaboii88
      @Coronaboii88 Год назад +2

      That’s dope! Life goals for sure 💪🏽💯

  • @HeadPwnerful
    @HeadPwnerful 2 месяца назад +4

    11.11.2011, just got home from school and my bro just bought skyrim. Just watching him play the game hypnotized me. Then I snuck at night to play it and I swear to god that moment truly change my life. 14 years later and I have 3 tattos relate to elder scrolls lore 😆

  • @mattlovesmovies
    @mattlovesmovies Год назад +12

    To put it simply, the atmosphere and specific feeling of Skyrim is why it’s always been my favorite game and always will be. It’s so cozy and my nostalgia for it has only grown larger as the years have gone on.

  • @Zjarro
    @Zjarro 2 года назад +383

    The game just feels truly free. You can do basically whatever you want, and with an exception of the 'main' questline, you are not forced to do ANYTHING.
    You can get lost for hours doing the nost basic shit, because the atmosphere is fantastic.

    • @KeepCalmCapybara
      @KeepCalmCapybara 2 года назад +19

      Yes! That's why every time I start a new play, I usually go to lv 40 easily without even going to see the Greybeards, and the fun thing about it is that you do not feel obligated to go to see them. I just go exploring and leveling up, and that's pretty fun. You don't feel the necessity to advance the quests.

    • @guruthosamarthruin4459
      @guruthosamarthruin4459 2 года назад +32

      True. I've actually done a playthrough as a hunter/gatherer, who simply wandered around killing animals and harvesting plants, then selling it all to earn enough money to buy a house. That was my WHOLE playthrough.

    • @MyFavoriteSportsballTeam
      @MyFavoriteSportsballTeam 2 года назад +10

      Not to mention the depth of playstyles with their leveling system. Back in 2011, it was a big deal that simply doing things would increase your skills. It really gives the character progression a personal feel, and just adds even more to the freedom that skyrim is known for.

    • @johnny_roots
      @johnny_roots 2 года назад +10

      Exactly! One of my coolests playthroughs was when I role-played a lumberjack living in halfmoon mill. It's such a pretty location to live, between a forest and a lake. I would chop wood, swim, hunt and gather, then sell stuff either in Falkreath or Riverwood. The house is not tiny but small enough to feel cozy. It was just perfect 😍
      (If you kill the vampires and wait for la certain amount of days, the house ownership changes so you can sleep on the bed)

    • @cosmicpanda7043
      @cosmicpanda7043 2 года назад +4

      @@MyFavoriteSportsballTeam None of that is true. The bareness of it's progression is only outdone by Ubisoft games. No aspect of character building really changes how you play the game; its the same interaction with a different coat of paint. Nor are you ever forced to actually roleplay, as you can pretty much do everything in one playthrough. The progression amounts to just ticking off check boxes as you walk through the same game experience every one else has. I do love Skyrim, but it was not revolutionary and is not a very good RPG

  • @M4gicMark
    @M4gicMark 2 года назад +236

    I remember when in my first playthrough of Skyrim back in 2012, I thought the wait feature was how you saved the game so the first time I did it, I had to calculate with my 11 year old brain how many hours I’d sleep and then wake up so the game wouldn’t start without me.

    • @chromerot
      @chromerot  2 года назад +75

      this is the silliest and most wholesome thing i've ever read

    • @uncrnsprklfrts5720
      @uncrnsprklfrts5720 2 года назад +16

      Ok... That is ridiculously adorable and sweet!!! Bless your 11 year old self, he was trying!

    • @flamestriderb3123
      @flamestriderb3123 2 года назад +7

      That's one innocent and adorable story I heard in a long time .

    • @ViktoriousDead
      @ViktoriousDead 2 года назад +1

      What?

    • @cmainenike8128
      @cmainenike8128 2 года назад +3

      I like turtles

  • @sean6380
    @sean6380 Год назад +6

    This game has always brought me back over the years because of the vastness of gameplay elements. You can be a wizard, a warrior, an assassin, worship different gods by completing their missions, and so on. Skyrim captures my imagination and has an environment and fluid quest system that allows me to go off on another adventure before my mind reminds me that I’m just in a game. Skyrim is a world inside a tv screen and no other game to me has captured that.

  • @okamiseele8614
    @okamiseele8614 Год назад +9

    I love Skyrim because of it's replay-ability. there is just so much to do, in an infinite new order, with new priorities and character builds.

  • @SoloReacTalk
    @SoloReacTalk 2 года назад +408

    In the era of modern gaming in full effect, I find myself lost unfulfilled and sad. I cry running back into the warm embrace of my family games Mass Effect Dragon Age and Skyrim. Money destroys passion money destroys risk money destroys dreams and yet we need money to make games.

    • @karanicole2999
      @karanicole2999 Год назад +11

      the holy trinity of RPGs

    • @paigeguitarplayer
      @paigeguitarplayer Год назад +6

      Truth im glad i can keep skyrim on my ps5 and ps4 forever this is the best game ever made in my opinion. This game influenced alot of games this game came out my senior year in high school i played it on ps3 and it lagged so badly haha but put 150 hours into it and loved it

    • @Newname6789
      @Newname6789 Год назад +4

      fallout 4

    • @deity6569
      @deity6569 Год назад +1

      sad reality of gaming 😭

    • @Orteguh
      @Orteguh Год назад +4

      We need to support the low budget games that have heart instead of buying Ubisofts and EAs games every year they don’t care about gamers experience they care about how much money they make and sadly most gamers can’t see that and buy an unfinished madden and cod every year.

  • @Gravy_moat
    @Gravy_moat 2 года назад +163

    They took everything someone could possibly want in a medieval fantasy game and gave it to us. Every time I thought I was bored I stumbled upon something else crazy to do or a new place.

  • @ApoRekt
    @ApoRekt 5 месяцев назад +1

    I remember years ago (skyrim was already out for almost a decade) a friend of mine came to my place.
    He didn't like games much. He got bored with them quickly. But then I showed him skyrim...
    He was fascinated.
    He played for hours, I went to bed, he kept playing. The next morning when I woke up he was still on my pc playing skyrim.
    He must've spent over 10 hours at this point.
    This goes to show how immersive this game is...

  • @mikeguy775
    @mikeguy775 10 месяцев назад +1

    Dragons dogma is something that came out around the same time but got overshadowed, it's like third person Skyrim but with a bit of dark souls in it

  • @poptartgalaxy2064
    @poptartgalaxy2064 2 года назад +2431

    Finally, a Skyrim video that doesn't sht on Skyrim

    • @chromerot
      @chromerot  2 года назад +202

      lmao right?

    • @elanlynn5973
      @elanlynn5973 2 года назад +98

      Srsly just don’t watch those zoomer youtubers plz, for I know, all the normal brain size content creators all appreciate Skyrim.

    • @chromerot
      @chromerot  2 года назад +287

      bro zoomers love everything it's the fkn milennials trying to sound smart

    • @Armoredcody
      @Armoredcody 2 года назад +28

      @@chromerot fr

    • @kimhyunwoo8983
      @kimhyunwoo8983 2 года назад +38

      To me Skyrim will always be a great game base but when you start to look beneath the surface is when it becomes bad, but IMO with how prevalent mods are in Skyrim I consider them to be base game content at this point, so to me Skyrim is a great game with the only caveat being mods become a must for myself and most players. I know there are other games with mods but I don’t think there is a single other game with as many mods or as much mod capability.

  • @GlennDierick
    @GlennDierick 2 года назад +530

    So many open world games have no exploration music nowadays. Music is one of the most crucial aspects in creating a feeling. That’s why Assassin’s Creed 2 is still considered the best in the series. Music gives meaning to what you are doing in an open world. If there’s no music, it feels like work, scratching off bullet points. Skyrim doesn’t feel like work. Skyrim feels like an interactive epic thanks to Jeremy Soule. Great video, by the way!

    • @Nietsewitch
      @Nietsewitch 2 года назад +12

      the mans contribution to this world with his music is although recognized still not appreciated as it should be

    • @SmartestRick13
      @SmartestRick13 2 года назад +12

      Dark souls pulled off the no music thing. Only a couple of boss fights have music and firelink shrine has music too. Works well for that game though due to the main focus being to make the player feel lonely and hopeless

    • @m0zzar353
      @m0zzar353 2 года назад

      @@SmartestRick13 i was about to mention dark souls too

    • @kmgenius
      @kmgenius 2 года назад +1

      Personally I thought assassin's creed odyssey had the best soundtrack of those games, plus the visuals are stunning

    • @downtownboyvt
      @downtownboyvt 2 года назад +4

      @@kmgenius I thought all AC games are like that. I loved the historic locations and legends they have in those games, too. Well except for AC 3 because...ya know

  • @SnackPack913
    @SnackPack913 Год назад +35

    My favorite moment in Skyrim was finally giving alchemy a hard go and finding out that you can stack forging potion effects… thus leading to a sword with +100000% dmg that can one hit a dragon. 10/10 bugs and all

    • @thomasjones3828
      @thomasjones3828 7 месяцев назад +3

      The bugs make the game have comical moments, idk how but the bugs in Skyrim compared to other games are just comical and not as annoying.

  • @limited8793
    @limited8793 Год назад +2

    The one thing I love about Skyrim, even 10 years later I always come across something new to do. Like some side quest I never seen before. Always something new.

  • @AeonsAlex.
    @AeonsAlex. 2 года назад +1064

    I have a lot of criticisms about Skyrim, but it's one of the few games that I will consistently come back to over and over, and definitely in my top 5 games of all time. I think mods do a lot for giving the game it's longevity but yeah, I can't deny that my first 500 hours were base game and I loved every minute.
    Great vid as always my man, I can tell you've worked hard on this and it really paid off. I hope you blow up, you deserve it, you have a great sense of humour.
    Guess I'm gonna go reinstall Skyrim.

    • @chromerot
      @chromerot  2 года назад +45

      yeah it's definitely far from a perfect game but it nails some things that very few other games do.
      thanks for still being around and watching my man! enjoy your next playthrough ;)

    • @AeonsAlex.
      @AeonsAlex. 2 года назад +17

      @@chromerot I shared your video on Twitter but considering I have 10 followers, one of which is you, I might as well have shouted out my window

    • @chromerot
      @chromerot  2 года назад +17

      @@AeonsAlex. lmfao it's cool dude appreciate the effort 🤣

    • @zaidlacksalastname4905
      @zaidlacksalastname4905 2 года назад +1

      Nice pfp

    • @roswellxo9214
      @roswellxo9214 2 года назад +9

      Get this, ive only ever played base Skyrim.

  • @touf48
    @touf48 2 года назад +411

    "shit literally feels like when you're trying to fight in a dream" that fkn killed me man, really glad i discovered your channel, you're funny af

    • @chromerot
      @chromerot  2 года назад +10

    • @ruolbu
      @ruolbu 2 года назад +5

      @@chromerot It's also a very apt comparison that intuitively makes sense imho.

    • @touf48
      @touf48 2 года назад +2

      @@chromerot also, this is kinda random, but i've discovered channels in the past at like 15k subs, felt like they were gonna be huge, then like a year later they had millions of subs. and i'm getting that same feeling with your channel, my sense might be wrong but i feel like it's been mostly right, so plz keep making content and in like a year i wouldn't be surprised if u get to half a million subs or even more

    • @chromerot
      @chromerot  2 года назад +6

      don't want to set unrealistic expectations for myself, all I know is I'll be making videos as long as there's people willing to watch them :) but thanks for that man, comments like this do more than you know to motivate me

    • @touf48
      @touf48 2 года назад +2

      @@chromerot yeah, that sounds like a healthy mentality to have. i'm glad you'll keep making content

  • @kennethmackinnon9089
    @kennethmackinnon9089 Год назад +1

    The first time round I played this game, it was about a year and a half of playing that I discovered a pretty big temple complex for the first time. That's what keeps me going back back every so often - there are still areas of the world that I haven't explored. And all those areas have stories that add to the world.

  • @lukep757
    @lukep757 7 месяцев назад

    When the music chimes in, i feel it in my plums.

  • @ijwd424
    @ijwd424 2 года назад +321

    Skyrim helped me through a whole lot of childhood trauma, narcissistic family members, undiagnosed childhood depression and intense loneliness. I don't game as much anymore as my mental health is much better and I have a lot more hobbies and work nowadays (same as you, I dreamed of having my own computer for so long and when I finally got it I stopped caring much for games). However, I still struggle with periods of depression, especially during the winter, and one of the things that help me feel a lot better? Playing Skyrim. I've played this game since 2012 and I'm still in love with it. Sometimes during winter when I'm struggling with my mental health really bad and the world around me is cold and dark, I jump into the game and wander around Whiterun and Falkreath for a bit. Hell, listening to the soundtrack can even make me homesick.
    Yes, it is a bit boring at times but there are still a few quests I haven't done yet, easter eggs I've never found and I've just started adding a few mods (mostly for weather and texture but a few with extra quests) which definitely helps replaying the game again. I'm scared I've put too high expectations in the coming Elder Scrolls game but the news about it has helped rekindle the gamer in me lol

    • @williamgregg6339
      @williamgregg6339 2 года назад +7

      I hope your doing good. I've heard lots of people say what you said about Skyrim.

    • @brandonh.6956
      @brandonh.6956 2 года назад +2

      I totally get your pain when it comes to Narcissistic family member as my parents are and really mad my life a living hell back then but when Skyrim came out I got completely lost in it for months on end so much so that it was the only thing I thought about it all day everyday. Now I'm saying it was healthy but it sure helped me theough some really bad times good to know that someone else feels the same :)

    • @ijwd424
      @ijwd424 2 года назад

      @@williamgregg6339 thank you!! I'm doing much better now :)

    • @ijwd424
      @ijwd424 2 года назад

      @@brandonh.6956 You'll get through this!!

    • @doubleyouwes
      @doubleyouwes 2 года назад +6

      I have a stronger connection with places and people in Skyrim than I do with most places and people in real life

  • @jostiontr4630
    @jostiontr4630 2 года назад +113

    14th of november, 2011, I was waiting in line to buy the new Elder Scrolls game. The excitement was just rushing through me and as soon as I bought it, I ran home to play it. As a massive Lord of the Rings fan I was amazed by this game. The music, the secrets, the random encounters with every kind of creature you could ever imagine. Today I was cleaning my room, and found my old PlayStation 3. I connected it on my TV and it still works. I started Skyrim and found my old account. An Orc, level 61 with full daedric armor and an enchanted daedric war axe. I just took a walk down Riverwood, Whiterun, visiting the college of WInterhold. And just enjoying walking in a world of fantasy. After playing i just started watching some Skyrim video's and i stumbled upon this one. I just had to leave this comment. Thank you for making this awesome, funny, relatable video.

    • @chromerot
      @chromerot  2 года назад +11

      i feel this comment, this is a game that left a permanent mark on a lot of people's lives and it will always remind us of those good times. glad you enjoyed!

  • @danperry5375
    @danperry5375 Год назад +10

    Skyrim is one of the greatest games of all time. I hope to God that the next one when ever it comes out can capture even a portion of it's appeal

  • @bluespill
    @bluespill Год назад +1

    Beautiful well done I actually clapped. This brought me back to my old neighborhood. The nostalgia I felt especially with Morrowind was heart wrenching. Thank you. Now I’m crying at work.

  • @josecarioca8785
    @josecarioca8785 Год назад +466

    This game feels like home to me. It was one of the very first game I played, back when I didn't even understand english yet. I learned most of it in Tamriel, and explored so much of it's corners that the whole world now feels familiar and strangely cozy. It's been a while since I played it for the last time, about 2 years I think, but I'll definetly pick it up again one day.

  • @lukefender94
    @lukefender94 Год назад +635

    I am so happy that Elden Ring was such a massive success, because it can show to a lot of gaming company executives, that creating a large scale single player RPG can be very profitable

    • @joshuawaugh300
      @joshuawaugh300 Год назад +2

      Indeed

    • @burgermind802
      @burgermind802 Год назад +35

      Not as profitable as games with season passes and micro transactions

    • @piss57
      @piss57 Год назад +15

      as long as those companies release a FINISHED game, not having cut content that is later on released as a dlc for the extra $, sure it could be successful. These days, however, it's a rarity for a company to not release a game that has some sort of a season pass or micro transaction

    • @Metaphix
      @Metaphix Год назад

      @@burgermind802 Unless the game is shit and no one wants to buy your microtransactions like the issues Ubisoft is running into with shit games like Ghost Recon Breakpoint

    • @kapilr.4768
      @kapilr.4768 Год назад

      It was success because all other games were shit 🤣, more like a pile a shit.

  • @joeyleonard5644
    @joeyleonard5644 Год назад +2

    I remember when Skyrim came out in November around my birthday I hadda be turning 12 or sum and we were dirt poor but my friend got it when it came out and I watched him turn into a werewolf wreckin havic on riverwood. Anyways on my birthday my stepdad took me to get the game and he was the only one who got me a present. When we got there we was short like 20$ on Skyrim but the guy at the store convinced us to try out Oblivion instead and even tho I was a little hurt that I didn’t get what I wanted I remember acting as happy as I could till I got home to play and that acting quickly turned to reality. Im so glad I got to experience playing Oblivion back then and got into the elder scrolls through that game. Eventually when my dad(stepdad) got me Skyrim a year or so later it made it that much more meaningful. Skyrim will forever be my favorite game

  • @KoeSeer
    @KoeSeer Месяц назад +3

    13 years later, I still back to Skyrim time to time.
    There are games like Cyberpunk or Elden Ring, but Skyrim offers freedom like non other.
    By freedom, i don't mean the character progression. I mean, the freedom to do whatever the heck you want with items. You can stack them, throw them away, line them up, etc etc.
    I actually spend 3 hours in real time just to put everything I want in my Solitude house.

  • @anormalguy8407
    @anormalguy8407 2 года назад +374

    I think people just love going on an adventure, exploring, fighting, experience things.
    Skyrim also gives you choice, allot of choice.
    Games like Terraria do the same thing

    • @andermolk2428
      @andermolk2428 2 года назад +3

      Minecraft too

    • @StNashable
      @StNashable 2 года назад +9

      Agree. I like the no class system.

    • @benoliver5593
      @benoliver5593 2 года назад +1

      funny how those choices (to me) in skyrim usually depend if i use magic or a blade to end your life

    • @silverscalederg8632
      @silverscalederg8632 2 года назад

      What choices do they give you that's actually meaningful? i'd love if they gave a choice to side with dragons...considering you're playing as "dragonBORN"

    • @MrAustyn88
      @MrAustyn88 2 года назад +1

      @@silverscalederg8632 The dragons want to destroy the world. Siding with them would have massive implications on the lore of the franchise for games to come.

  • @SemberAlistair
    @SemberAlistair Год назад +177

    One of the most memorable moments for me, playing Skyrim for the first time, was when I was exploring catacombs in one of the dungeons, felt really alone in that place and it was way too quiet until I heard a draugr grunt around the corner, scared the shit outta me lmaoo

    • @yasminey6011
      @yasminey6011 Год назад +13

      Oh my goodness when I realized not all the skeletons in the burial crypts were actually dead 😭😭😭

    • @aymanaamam2382
      @aymanaamam2382 Год назад +1

      try hugging the dead body of the high mother in dark brotherhood sanctuary

    • @MKW-oc8fj
      @MKW-oc8fj Год назад +1

      Honestly i felt relieved when draugr came. Being lonely is just worse.

  • @Z1ng1s
    @Z1ng1s 5 месяцев назад +1

    Gotta give thumb up for that overwhelmed surprising honesty relvealing about your must have Steam anime ecchi game you purchased! Cultured man. Gotta try that game. 😂😎👏💯

  • @exocakes4587
    @exocakes4587 Год назад

    That OooooOoooOOO does hit diff when just wandering around then turning around to look at the view.

  • @DOPEdwarf
    @DOPEdwarf 2 года назад +45

    Skyrim is a good example of how powerful music is

  • @BabzaiWWP
    @BabzaiWWP Год назад +54

    skyrim really does feel like when you walk down a random place in the forest and theres a big rock by the river and you sit there and its nice

  • @Wrobbers0317
    @Wrobbers0317 Год назад

    I have so many fond memories of Skyrim back when I used to play it on my PS3. I remember ages ago watching videos of RUclipsrs playing through the game and always wanting to get it, then finally I got it for Christmas a few years ago. I was thrust into a world unlike any other, and It remains to this day my favorite game. I remember vividly the time I lost a companion permanently in some ruins, the time I spent hours trying to revert back to normal while being a vampire after being forcefully infected, only to have to switch to an older save to not lose my mind. Skyrim is such a unique game with so many mechanics and mini questlines that can indulge any player in this magnificent world.

  • @ehpycblaze1429
    @ehpycblaze1429 Год назад +1

    I’ll just get straight to the point, I love your channel

  • @SuperBallani
    @SuperBallani 2 года назад +330

    This video is so refreshing, i was wondering why every essay about Skyrim that i see is either negative or really nitpicky when it's very clearly one of the most beloved game ever. I'm glad to see that there is Skyrim lover ready to talk as much as the other.

    • @chromerot
      @chromerot  2 года назад +20

      you know i had to do it to em 😎😎😎

    • @Incurafy
      @Incurafy 2 года назад +8

      Something being popular doesn't make it good.

    • @TheoneGabsta
      @TheoneGabsta 2 года назад +9

      Its weird. Is Skyrim my favorite game? No, it's not even my favorite Elder Scrolls game. Is it the game I've sunk the most time into? By a long shot.

    • @lordthruxawe504
      @lordthruxawe504 2 года назад +5

      @@Incurafy that's true. I think Skyrim is a good game (made amazing with mods) but I actually preferred oblivion over Skyrim. I have no idea whether this is true, but I think for a lot of people their first expansive open world RPG was Skyrim, so for them it was a really impressive game. For me, oblivion had more character and I found the world more compelling, and I don't think Skyrim improved enough mechanically/gameplay wise. It still had pretty much the same clunky combat as oblivion but with dual wielding and shouts.
      Imo when they make the next elder scrolls game I hope they add more elements to the gameplay to make combat more fun. That's the main thing I think TES needs.

    • @slinkyslink5161
      @slinkyslink5161 2 года назад +2

      @@lordthruxawe504 "I think for a lot of people their first expansive open world RPG was Skyrim, so for them it was a really impressive game." This is exactly the reason.
      I remember in middle school, hearing kids say "when is Skyrim 2?" and "have you played Elder Scroll?" They didnt even know Elder Scrolls is a series that has been around for a while.
      The fact is that open world rpgs weren't exposed to mainstream audiences very much until Skyrim, so it was groundbreaking for all these people who had only played games like COD, Madden, GTA, or FIFA up until this point. Yet to people who were already familiar with the series, skyrim was a marginal improvement at best.

  • @B-A-L
    @B-A-L 2 года назад +66

    One thing I love about Skyrim is that it's a game that I can play for hours on end but then put it down and not play it for weeks because of other games getting in the way and then pick it up again and just continue where I left off without having to remember what I was doing last time!

  • @EMCPublishing44
    @EMCPublishing44 11 месяцев назад

    Bro when you did the tune of the music that got me 😂😂

  • @Oiantaku
    @Oiantaku 11 месяцев назад

    Beautiful video and great points especially concerning mods.

  • @dragonrykr
    @dragonrykr 2 года назад +653

    People saying Skyrim is as deep as a pond probably haven't even grasped the fact that there are almost 300 books in the game, which introduce the player to the TES lore which is one of the most expansive ones I've ever seen in a fantasy world. That alone is what makes me interested in this universe, if not anything else.

    • @GikamesShadow
      @GikamesShadow 2 года назад +58

      People who play games dont go into games wanting to read books for 7+ hours
      They wanna go dungeoneer and kill stuff
      Its great that its there as optional content, but any world can be deep by adding lore. Thats nothing new. The story of skyrim is interesting, no one is denying that. But when Alduin turns from "Destroyer of worlds" into a wet tissue in the game, THAT is where the problem starts and ends.
      My favorite story is that of Pelinal, something I would have LOVED to somehow find in Skyrim. Thats some epic and interesting stuff that they could have made as a quest in the story. Follow the steps of Pelinal, find his pieces that somehow made it to Skyrim. Get faced with what your final decision means for any Mer around the world. You could easily put him back together but what does that mean for the future? Or do you go against this decision and instead take one of his most powerful weapons? Maybe even the bull as a companion as you usurped Pelinal or took on his legacy. And in turn, spotting the Bull could set any Mer into fear or they try to attack you instantly.
      Hircine is another example. Lord of the Hunt. We have but one quest that really involves him and nothing comes of it apart from a bloody ring. This stuff should have been expanded on but it hasnt. As a werewolf through the companions you could have been under direct protection even, or heck even better follow a questline given by Hircine to find some artifacts that would aid you as a werewolf instead of just straight up leveling your character again.
      People who play games shouldnt need to read the books in order to understand and love the world
      Same as people who watch movies shouldnt need to read books in order to enjoy the movie.

    • @dragonrykr
      @dragonrykr 2 года назад +37

      @@GikamesShadow That is perfectly plausible and nowhere did I question the fact that a game can be enjoyable without delving into the lore. However, that is my personal favorite bit of the game, that it allows you to do so, if you want.

    • @-neuro
      @-neuro 2 года назад +4

      I don't think anyone said skyrim is as deep as a pond... If so then they haven't played it.

    • @GeorgeandMooch
      @GeorgeandMooch 2 года назад +23

      well it’s because the game seems shallow compared to the previous entires in the series.

    • @Pragabond
      @Pragabond 2 года назад +29

      They have grasped it you just haven't grasped the fact they're not talking about the lore (that Skyrim added only a small fraction to compared to the already established lore) they're talking about mechanics and gameplay and how the game IS significantly simpler compared to previous games. No idea why you think anyone has criticized the lore of the games dude. Despite being a really fun game to get lost in because its just fun is less deep than previous games mechanically. Its more action than RPG compared to previous games. And most of those books were in PREVIOUS games and got brought over to Skyrim with, of course, a nice chunk of new additions specifically for the territory and especially with Alduin.
      Skyrim is still shallow compared to what it COULD be and what previous games have been. Its still loved but that doesn't mean people don't have that valid criticism of it being dumbed down and made more casual friendly and shallow to get that mass appeal but when TES6 is likely more streamlined and dumbed down you're going to understand long time players grievances after they somehow get one-handed and two-handed to fit into just ONE skill tree and one skill. Although hopefully with tabletop games having become way more popular in the mainstream it will embrace that trend and give us all the action of Skyrim with more depth in the skills and abilities side. I'm definitely hopeful like I was with Skyrim to see more of a return to that and see MORE skills and MORE customization so you can make a character that is completely uniquely yours with an endless variety of other stuff you can make. Oblivion had lots of problems and is actually my least favorite but it did have a nice blend of the RPG elements and action elements. Either way it seems like you've watched none of the video essays critiquing Skyrim or even listened to random people critiquing Skyrim if you somehow think "but the books and lore" addresses literally ANYTHING anyone is saying about it. This is about the game not the lore

  • @Sickliff
    @Sickliff 2 года назад +95

    Came in expecting to feel good about Skyrim, came out feeling depressed about the state of the industry.
    For real though, you make some good points. The game is simply a wonderful foundation to build on. Whether that be with stories, mods, challenges, the player creates their journey on the backbone of a lively world.

  • @billyblumpkin2742
    @billyblumpkin2742 8 месяцев назад +2

    The soul point is so underrated and important. A game, show, movie, comic, etc, has to have a soul and for some reason even if we can’t consciously see some of those finer details that make up the soul, we can still sense it.
    Idk how, but we do. For example, LOTRs did the same thing by focusing on the finer details. I never saw 80% of what they did to armor or set design that they show you in the special features but somehow you know and feel it’s there.

    • @rhob2422
      @rhob2422 8 месяцев назад

      Soul/Passion, Skyrim has a lot of Passion put into it's creation, not just a cash grab which most games/content are now. Maybe it was one of the last before pay to win and DLC became so prominent. And with LOTR, yeah, just look at The Hobbit Trilogy, you can literally feel the difference.

  • @TeriyakiTakeout
    @TeriyakiTakeout Год назад

    Your stuff is my kind of content man. So glad I found your channel a while back.

  • @monthc
    @monthc 2 года назад +80

    Skyrim is a toy set. You play as your action figure, the other action figures act autonomously, and it's amazing. It is the most incredible toy set ever made, because it's almost a blank slate ("almost" because it's set in a preexisting IP built on certain lore and cosmology) for you to play with as you see fit. And toys are awesome.
    Skyrim is all the things you imagined in your head as a kid playing with action figures, but actually built and presented to you. It's immersive and epic.

    • @sarahjessicaparkersnose3774
      @sarahjessicaparkersnose3774 2 года назад +4

      Thanks for putting how I feel about this game into words. The amount of adventures I had in skyrim with the use of imagination feels endless. I remember as a kid playing this game through day and night and it would feel like I went through the whole lotr trilogy from start to finish. Just by wandering aimlessly with no fast travel, letting my mind immerse into the world.

    • @fatkiefbowls
      @fatkiefbowls 2 года назад

      @@sarahjessicaparkersnose3774 yes sir

    • @jonrmahnke
      @jonrmahnke 2 года назад +1

      It is a toy set if you like broken toys that don't work right. The fact that 10 years later this game is still a buggy glitchy fucked mess shows the absolute inability of Bethesda to make a game that works. To see gamers turn a blind eye to that shows that gamers are complete morons. You can shit in a bowl and call it skyrim extended edition and gamers would buy it

    • @sarahjessicaparkersnose3774
      @sarahjessicaparkersnose3774 2 года назад

      jonrmahnke thats where imagination comes in handy

  • @rafliavriza3651
    @rafliavriza3651 2 года назад +83

    For me Skyrim was always interesting because it's predictable enough to feel familiar playing it, but unpredictable enough to introduce you into something that you might've never come across before. I remember in my first playthrough when I was going to an inn and there was this new interaction I've never had before with this guy called Sam Guavenne (whatever Sanguine's alias were in that game), and he asked for a drinking contest, I was like "Okay this is new, that's cool" and literally after that I passed out and woke up in the Temple of Dibella and was like "THE GAME CAN DO THIS?", and mind you I'd never been to Markarth up until that point so it was also really surprising when I got out of the temple and looked around to see a city built on a mountain and waterfall, especially since I checked on the map and I realized I was in the far west of the map. Not to mention how that Sanguine quest ended up going.

    • @tennysontableau
      @tennysontableau 2 года назад +3

      Yeah, that must have been a shocker. Markarth is a pretty cool place too.

    • @stevenwebb3475
      @stevenwebb3475 2 года назад +9

      Before I knew you could use carts I used that quest as my way to discover markarth.

    • @skilz8098
      @skilz8098 2 года назад +1

      @@stevenwebb3475 I just ran there! I ran everywhere and climbed nearly every mountain and went into every cave, mine, and dungeon... and I'd do it all again! I sometimes take the roads, but mostly I'll make my own path, even swim down the rivers and fall off of waterfalls hoping to land in water and not die from the fall. It's quite a journey and it never gets old! Oh and I did I mention the music? Now that's a masterpiece!

    • @blackharmonics4518
      @blackharmonics4518 2 года назад +3

      @@skilz8098 Feel it. I also always made up my own ways to discover all of Skyrim. Well, "all of it" is quite a phrase... I believe, even after 1500+ hours, I still haven't seen all of the little gimmicks, Skyrim has to offer. May it be a random skelleton with a letter on top of a mountain, a headless ghost on a horse randomly travelling at night, a corpse in the ocean with a chest or a grave with "a travellers skull" in a passageway and stuff like that. It still feels magical to explore stuff like that.
      Edit: Not to mention all the unmarked spots on the map which don't follow any remarkable quest and don't do anything but giving atmosphere and lore to the world.

    • @bachiak1
      @bachiak1 Год назад

      Yes I went thru this in my first playtrough too. That’s when I realized this game was different from others

  • @pablosaezguerrero4599
    @pablosaezguerrero4599 8 месяцев назад

    Awesome video. Couldn't have express it better

  • @nowaz
    @nowaz Год назад +8

    Another game series that is the perfect example of depth and not width is the Yakuza series.
    Kamurocho (from Yakuza) feels like home to me even though the size of the city is relatively small compared to other open world games.

  • @ados1280
    @ados1280 Год назад +375

    When you talked about the "timing" of when Skyrim came out, part of its success was that back in 2011, that was within the era where massive online multiplayer FPS games were at their peak, like Call of Duty for example. And then came Skyrim, a huge solo player RPG adventure that was easy to get into and very fun, it was REALLY refreshing at the time.
    Edit: Okay yes there were other RPGs at the time. Just not in the mainstream. RPGs have a bit of a niche audience and Skyrim appealed to as wide an audience as possible, so yes, for many people, it was refreshing.

    • @breadformyfamily4175
      @breadformyfamily4175 Год назад +19

      Exactly. We’d binge CoD hard and then need a day or two on Skyrim to go back and kick ass with guns.
      My gaming group was so confused when they logged on and half of us were starting Skyrim instead of working our way through the 10th Prestige

    • @S0L12D3
      @S0L12D3 10 месяцев назад +5

      Not only was it refreshing, but at that time, we had never seen a world as immersive as Skyrim….

    • @springbok8876
      @springbok8876 10 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@S0L12D3 There was Oblivion but somehow that did not reach the same popularity levels as Skyrim did.
      Oblivion was fantastic for its time. I played that as much as I played Skyrim. Still have both installed, never got to play Morrowind but just bought it the other day though so going to start my first playthrough of that soon.

    • @S0L12D3
      @S0L12D3 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@springbok8876 I completely agree, but Skyrim took everything to the next level. Thats it’s all I meant! To this day we have not seen such an immersive world as Skyrim. And mods have only made it even more welcoming to new players!

    • @Lofirainbows
      @Lofirainbows 9 месяцев назад +4

      Uh, no only in the mainstream, There were other Role-playing videogames; Dark Souls/Dragons Dogma/Mass Effect/Multiple New Vegas Dlc/Red Dead Redemption/Tales of Xillia/White Knight Chronicles/Witcher 2 Assassin of Kings, literally released that same year (What a year, holy hell). Skyrim isn't just timing I think it's placement

  • @Jjohnny642
    @Jjohnny642 2 года назад +65

    One of my best video game experiences was an 8 hour journey from whiterun to riften. I got so distracted by the world

  • @boobalooba5786
    @boobalooba5786 Год назад +4

    Skyrim is a truly magical experience. Still my favorite game that has ever been made, and one of the few games I go back to constantly. I have it on my Switch just so I can play it when I'm not at home.

  • @seancooper6416
    @seancooper6416 Год назад

    Subscribed on the spot
    Top tier Skyrim commentary

  • @thedarkdojo5115
    @thedarkdojo5115 2 года назад +130

    It's the game that refuses to die... A truly timeless game, that I've spent thousands of hours playing, even before mods...

    • @williamgregg6339
      @williamgregg6339 2 года назад +3

      The game never gets old.

    • @blitzball4lyfe823
      @blitzball4lyfe823 2 года назад

      @@williamgregg6339 for real! I don’t have a home console anymore but have a Switch and Skyrim was first on my list and started another playthrough! Cannot get enough!

    • @williamgregg6339
      @williamgregg6339 2 года назад

      @@blitzball4lyfe823 - ​ @Kenneth Browning - I have a pc and a bunch of older consoles. I bought it for PS3 because it was a couple dollars. I put the disc in to see if it worked. I ended up playing it for hours. It didn't matter that I have it on pc and PS4 which are better versions than the original PS3. I just kept playing the PS3 copy. Lol. It must be perfect for the switch since you can bring it with you and play it anywhere. I wanted to get a switch when they started getting older games for it.

    • @DrBell-gi7bf
      @DrBell-gi7bf 2 года назад +3

      10+ years of relevancy puts it into the trans-generational category. It's basically the Ocarina of Time of our era. This is a game that will be played until humans are no longer on the face of the earth.

  • @KaioKenneth4
    @KaioKenneth4 2 года назад +331

    One of my favorite things about Skyrim is that everybody experiences it differently. While many use Whiterun for shopping due to nostalgia and convenience, I’ve always preferred Riften. Just from this video it seems that your favorite is Markarth.

    • @chromerot
      @chromerot  2 года назад +45

      for sure, I didn't even want to record in whiterun cause it's so familiar to everyone. you're right markarth is my fav ;)

    • @Nicolo-ue9xu
      @Nicolo-ue9xu 2 года назад +26

      Yeah, riften is best. A shady town where you escape from your family house in whiterun... Oh wait that is just me

    • @bubblepop999
      @bubblepop999 2 года назад +4

      I didn't mind Riften on pc but on console I avoid it like the plague !

    • @wadesworld6250
      @wadesworld6250 2 года назад +38

      10 years and I still can't find my way around Markarth.

    • @hhaaddiizzffaarr
      @hhaaddiizzffaarr 2 года назад +3

      now that you put it that way damn, my favorite is solitude, I remember saving up all my gold just to buy a house there. I would roam around just trying to complete all the quests I can in that city. Something about the song and the atmosphere there made me feel special.

  • @harrisonfarley676
    @harrisonfarley676 Год назад +1

    I just discovered your content and think you’re hilarious and Skyrim is incredible also. My only gripe is that I wish you had more videos. I never like/follow but you just earned both. Keep it coming wardie.

  • @seantrnko
    @seantrnko Год назад +2

    More than a game, no more words needed. Still playing it.

  • @lena-trajkovic17
    @lena-trajkovic17 Год назад +139

    I know this is an old video, but i also want to add that the elder scrolls universe having so much extensive and complicated lore adds to the feeling, similar to lord of the rings. You know that there is a reason things are the way they are. Physics, magic, creatures, they all have their whys and hows; you can read the history of the entire universe and feel as though its a real universe with real events. It’s what makes it so fun for me. You can never finish learning about the lore

    • @Jamer6765
      @Jamer6765 Год назад +10

      Exactly I think the lore is what gives it such a soul things don’t exist because they exist there’s a reason behind everything like the relationship between the Dwemer and falmer

    • @joevenables3393
      @joevenables3393 Год назад +1

      It’s almost spoiled me in a way, other rpgs feel soulless to me a lot of the time because they don’t have TES’s level of lore behind them, and I find it hard to be immersed or even just care

  • @ShadowTheLight
    @ShadowTheLight 2 года назад +36

    Skyrim feels way too relevant for being 10 years old, it's a crime

  • @jetsfan333
    @jetsfan333 2 месяца назад +1

    Literally still the only game I play regularly over a decade later. legendary

  • @sleepymonsteraddict
    @sleepymonsteraddict Год назад +41

    Nothing like having an awful day, starting up your pc and playing skyrim. After some time you end up walking somewhere in the tundra of whiterun and it's night and THE SONG hits, removes all sorrows in an instant. And I've tried other rpgs like assasins creed, but no game ever manages to pull me away from reality and that's why skyrim is a masterpiece.

    • @TaylorPlays_
      @TaylorPlays_ Год назад +1

      THE SONG = Secunda :')

    • @wul3391
      @wul3391 Год назад

      Assassins creed to Skyrim is like comparing chewing gum to a big steak, it has no substance

  • @PatrickWDunne
    @PatrickWDunne 2 года назад +204

    One of the only games I bought a second time. It's probably my favorite game. No other open world game has felt this immersive.

    • @Golemoid
      @Golemoid Год назад +11

      Only twice? I think the average is 3 or 4 times given all the ports and re-releases 😂

    • @thewewguy8t88
      @thewewguy8t88 Год назад

      well for me there was fallout 4 and even to a degree red dead 2( but that game is missing a few things skyrim and fallout have made work)

    • @Leptirus
      @Leptirus Год назад +3

      I bought skyrim like 6 times by now. Cos i bought the normal edition for pc, then legendary, then special edition and now anniversary. Then i also bought skyrim vr and skyrim for my ps4. I just love the game too much ;-;

    • @isaiahgarcia163
      @isaiahgarcia163 Год назад +1

      I got the 360 version, ps4, switch, and I play it on game pass lmfaooooo

    • @michaelgreenwell9809
      @michaelgreenwell9809 Год назад +1

      i have bought skate 3 five times

  • @tastefullynerdy1161
    @tastefullynerdy1161 28 дней назад +2

    Skyrim is just the perfect template for a fantasy setting. You have spectacular freedom, content for weeks on end, nigh infinite replayability and a great sense of achievement.
    And that is without mods. Skyrim is a modders wet dream.
    It can be one of the best looking games, cock and ball torture painful, the best NSFW game you can possibly play, a god tier dungeon crawler etc etc.
    And while both of that is nice, nothing comes even remotely close to how cozy the game just feels. The immaculate music, world design, colour palette etc are all just so... All encompassing and create their own aesthetic in an unmatched way

  • @damonalfero3125
    @damonalfero3125 11 месяцев назад

    Omg I'm loving this review. You're so freaking funny. I'm going to check your channel to see if this is a common thing so I can subscribe.

  • @OneMeanArtist
    @OneMeanArtist 2 года назад +137

    As an artist one of the first things that struck me was how much attention to detail was given to every visual and auditory aspect of Skyrim. That is something that only comes from a place of sincere love and dedication to what you're creating. There is nothing cookie-cutter about it. I think that, whether consciously or subconsciously, we all feel the love and countless hours that were invested for our enjoyment as we journey throughout this world they've made for us. True art strums that part of your soul like no other. Sure it has its quirky moments, but even those are endearing in their own weird way.

    • @oscaroscar7904
      @oscaroscar7904 2 года назад +9

      Yeah no one ever mentions the details in this game like going under a tree seeing every detail of a leaf, or every root and detail and that it was first person made it better, it had alot of issues but people forget about your point ( and most ignore one of the most importent aspects of art which is god is in the detail) it has nothing to do about god but all great art has that extra dimension of a detail that is there even when your not looking, thats what made the tv series sopranos so great, the actors understood that it was not only about saying your line or understanding the character but adding that extra 3d dimension of thinking " where did i park the car" while saying something about the weather while feeling sad about aging, and skyrims nature and world has that essential extra step that people might not notice but that people notice for the beliveble world, funny enough, even if the wicher 3 a much newer game was really good with quests and game it lacked that extreme " love for detail" in every corner of its world and felt a bit cut and paste and all the npcs looked alike and said the same "huh" "hah" but most people dont notice these things but its impressive that you picked up on these things beacuse i noticed this as well and its something that has died out in video games as art, i mean skyrim has a very chill, zen feel where you can just walk around and look under a tree with alot of detail, you dont have to of course but it makes the art and world feel more real, most people dont notice these things in art and thats why it has been dumbed down in games, music but its still in tv shows ( sry for bad english.)

  • @user-rt9zf6sk2p
    @user-rt9zf6sk2p 2 года назад +122

    It's funny because I love more complex games like Divinity as well as Skyrim. I never at all felt like Skyrim was an inferior game even if it didn't have complex mechanics or an intricate story. You're so right about the whole depth vs width thing too. Great video my guy keep em coming.

    • @chromerot
      @chromerot  2 года назад +8

      thanks my dude, glad you enjoyed

    • @Nicolo-ue9xu
      @Nicolo-ue9xu 2 года назад

      Divinity Skyrim and fallout are the best rpg

  • @kazukid8027
    @kazukid8027 11 месяцев назад

    I remember watching my dad play elder schrools and there some of my fondest memories, it felt like watching a movie you could play and it’s something I contribute to me getting into games

  • @canaldodorn839
    @canaldodorn839 11 месяцев назад

    Man, your video brought me to tears, so many memories of unforgeteable times, thanks!

  • @StockportJambo
    @StockportJambo 2 года назад +352

    The thing that got me about Skyrim when I first played it 10 years ago is this. I look into the distance, and I see a mountain. I can climb that mountain. Just because it's there. And the game will just let me. It was the sense of total freedom - of either following the plot & story in a linear fashion, or just randomly saying "Fuck this, I'm going" and sod off somewhere else.
    There's also the variety, and believability of the world itself... small things like the further north you go, the more wintry & harsh it becomes, and going south brings you to lush meadows and trees. It feels real, which is achieved by the game having astonishingly good internal consistency. This is key, and also why the bugs and jankiness don't really matter too much.
    A lot of that is down to the late Adam Adamowicz, the lead concept artist for Skyrim. He's the one who got the whole company 'on the same page' with the *feel* of Skyrim. He passed away (aged 43) a few months after Skyrim's release, and the game industry has frankly never been the same since. Certainly Bethesda haven't released a good game without his input IMO.

    • @StockportJambo
      @StockportJambo 2 года назад +14

      @Crow He drew everything by hand I believe, which was quite unusual even back then... and just didn't stop. I imagine there wasn't a wall in the Bethesda offices that wasn't filled with his artwork.
      As the video says, the 'feel' of Skyrim is its enduring quality, and even though I never met the guy, I think of Adam every time I play the game. I've seen one-off geniuses like him before, and what they bring, and I know they can't be replaced.
      Why is there no other game like Skyrim? I mean, yes, money - as in the video - but also Adam Adamovicz.
      (and yes, as a Scot, I had to Google his surname spelling!)

    • @B-A-L
      @B-A-L 2 года назад +5

      I had the same experience playing Need For Speed Underground 2 when I drove up into the hills for the first time and looked down on the city in the distance knowing it wasn't just a backdrop!

    • @ChessArmyCommander
      @ChessArmyCommander 2 года назад +3

      That doesn't bode well for The Elder Scrolls 6.

    • @ada0015
      @ada0015 2 года назад +3

      thank you for this info. I didn't know about him at all even though I think I'm a massive skyrim nerd. all I know is todd howard

    • @OrlandoShroom
      @OrlandoShroom 2 года назад +4

      I could be wrong, but it would've be nice to see a tribute to Adam from Bethesda in the re-released Skyrim versions since he was a HUGE part of the game. There is no telling what we would have had otherwise.

  • @Mark-zk3gu
    @Mark-zk3gu 2 года назад +151

    Skyrim is one of the most creatively executed open world games I've ever played. It's incredible how alive the world feels.

    • @deadshot4245
      @deadshot4245 Год назад

      Try out stalker series and the anomaly mod too great stuff there too if you enjoy shooters

    • @SnailHatan
      @SnailHatan Год назад

      Creatively?

    • @Mark-zk3gu
      @Mark-zk3gu Год назад

      @@SnailHatan yes

  • @sydniebush6490
    @sydniebush6490 Год назад

    that whole outro was really funny lol

  • @m.aryankurniawan9353
    @m.aryankurniawan9353 11 месяцев назад +1

    Man, whatever games i've played or completed, replaying Skyrim feels like...returning home

  • @DimaRakesah
    @DimaRakesah Год назад +69

    One of the things I love about the Elder Scrolls games is just the ambiance. It feels real and organic and just epic. I can spend hours just designing my house and sitting by the fireplace, listening to the crackle of burning wood while I read The Lusty Argonian Maid. Again.

  • @husseinmujtaba6457
    @husseinmujtaba6457 2 года назад +167

    I swearrr u spoke my heart out when u said that skyrims the perfect balance between depth and width, the scale is insane and every bit of the game has depth, every city has a history and differemt stories and rumours going around and unique factions, and the whole world was sooo big but connected.

    • @SnailHatan
      @SnailHatan Год назад

      Lore that you can only find in the form of books that have zero effect on the world is not depth.

    • @husseinmujtaba6457
      @husseinmujtaba6457 Год назад +11

      @@SnailHatan My brother its no use explaining to you what depth means in creativity, cant argue with guys lacking basic common sense.

  • @Val-hz3fc
    @Val-hz3fc Год назад +1

    I think Minecraft is a great example of how a lot of width can work. I mean it's not like the game is focused on one thing in particular to any extent. Sure you can fight, but it's not like the enemies are very complex nor the "progression" you make very deep. And yeah there's building, but it's not innately very complex or varied (although people get really creative to make up for it). And yet it's a classic. The ultimate sandbox. It makes so much room for creativity.

  • @thugasssean
    @thugasssean Год назад

    Great video, makes me want to play again