For me, I’m really hoping for ocean biomes/planets and large waterfalls and rivers. With the ability to make bases on any planet Id really love maximum biome diversity so I can fly around and pick a best vacation home, but so far the generation of the planets looks to not have too much verticality and I haven’t seen more water than a small lake.

I’d also hope for some small form of terrain manipulation so that you can build cave homes and such, but this is all probably a stretch if they haven’t shown any of it yet, but that’s the point of this post.

What about you guys, what would you love to see in the game that they haven’t shown yet, even if it’s a pipe dream?

  • DemigodrickMA
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    1 year ago

    I think because it is a Bethesda game, i’m not TOO worried about stuff “missing” from the base game because of the mod scene. I suppose thats an odd attitude to have with a game i’ve paid a fair bit of money for, but I’ve spent more time with modded games than with the actual game in past titles.

    • all-knight-party@kbin.cafeOP
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      1 year ago

      I usually don’t feel like anything is fundamentally missing from Bethesda games, it’s usually that there’s so much raw potential and such a strong foundation that what you can add is essentially limitless. If Starfield lacks ocean biomes or excessive verticality I wouldn’t feel it was “missing” that per se because of how much sheer content is across the rest of the game. Spread more broadly instead of deeply, something id more expect in an iterative sequel rather than a beginning for a new IP.

      I have, across all Skyrim releases, probably close to 1,000 hours in it, which is a lot for me, I usually clock in at around 200-300 in other large open world games.

      If Skyrim didn’t have mods I feel my hours played would be closer to the 200-300 of other games like that, but due to mods it’s extended that far beyond its natural life. I don’t think most games are capable of sustaining my attention for that long, and in most cases, unless it’s due to challenge like Monster Hunter, I don’t think you can healthily expect a single player playable game to deliver 1,000 hours of content, a game that provides even a fraction of that I would consider “complete”.

      But a lot of people have particular definitions for what complete means based off previous games in the series or how they feel certain aspects of the mechanics or content were executed.