Support World Domination!
Link to us
and bookmark
us (CTRL+D).

Home / News

RSS Feed
News Archive

Forums

Community

Fan Fiction
Fan Art
Previews
Interviews

Gamercast

The Gamer Podcast

Subscribe | subscribe in iTunes
Latest entries:

Episode 209: Kinect pricin...
Episode 208: New Xbox 360
Episode 207: Laura should ...
Episode 206: Rob Zombie vs...
Episode 205: It is not Har...
Episode 204: E3 2010 wrap ...
Episode 203: Nintendo and ...
Episode 202: Microsoft at ...
Episode 201: Almost E3
Episode 200: OMG we did 20...

TES 4 Oblivion Info

FAQ
Maps
Books
Lore
Quests
Factions
Characters
Races
Birthsigns
Classes
Creatures
Walkthrough
System Requirements

TES 4 Oblivion Media

Screenshots
Wallpapers
Videos

Mods and Files

All Files
Weapons and Armour
Creatures and Characters
Models
Clothing
Buildings
Terrain
Items
Quest
Miscellaneous

Latest Files

Wood Elf Voice Mod
Hanstholm village
Grim Reaper
DUKE PATRICKS SCA COMBAT MOD WITH NO RECOI
Shadow's Merged Value Fixesv1.1
TamrielTravellers(MerchantPlus0.70)

TES 4 Oblivion Portal

Staff
Support Us

Affiliates

TES related:






Project APEX
Contact me to add yours.

Non-TES related:

Paul Smith's Blog

Subscribe | Latest entries:

Windows Phone 7 beta emula...
Gaming on a Macintosh, lik...
Distortion and fuzzy noise...
Why is the day exactly 24 ...
Windows Live Messenger Wav...
"Magnified" lunar eclipse?...
Windows Live Essentials Wa...
Clearing up storage confus...
iPhone 4 can't keep up, lo...
Questions for "evolutionis...


Xbox 360 Degrees
DOOM 3 Portal
Quake 4 Portal
Half-Life Portal
PES Portal
Omikron Portal
Paul Smith's Blog
Windows Resource


More Oblivion reviews
Sat, 25 Mar 2006 18:38:00 +0000

by Paul
As the deluge of Oblivion reviews continue to assiduously decant in, IGN have fluttered up their new 5-page review of TES4: Oblivion, giving it a verdict of a superlative 9.3/10.0 overall. Not to mention that Gamespot has also sputtered up their new 3-page review of TES4: Oblivion, giving it a 9.6/10.0 overall. Here's a nugget from both reviews:
"Once outside the initial dungeon, you'll start to understand just how massive Oblivion's world really is. Opportunities for new quests and stories are everywhere, and there's no pressure as to which path you should follow. Thanks to the map, journal and fast travel system, it's way easier to follow a path once you pick one. Throughout each of Cyrodiil's towns you'll find nearly everyone has something they need done, and each task has a story behind it. Though many quests turn out to be standard dungeon crawls, there's usually a twist or turn along the way. For instance, buying a house at a discounted price in Anvil seems like a great deal. That is, until you actually sleep there and get attacked by ghosts. Upon investigation, you discover there's the corpse of a long-dead Necromancer haunting the crap out of your basement, and he's still pissed off. This kind of attention to detail is present in many of the game's bevy of quests."
"So the breadth of content is as remarkable as ever, but the most important thing is this: The many types of gameplay in Oblivion are well-designed and deeply satisfying, even when taken on their own. That's the main difference between this game and Morrowind. This may be a role-playing game, but you could play it like a pure action game, or like a stealth game, or like an adventure game, and it'd still be at least as good, if not better, than games that are specialized in these regards.

Oblivion does a great job of quickly introducing you to all these different aspects of play, successfully engaging you rather than overwhelming you. You see the world through your character's eyes, but a behind-the-back perspective is also available. Initially you just pick a name, race, and gender for your character, and the game opens with you stuck in a dungeon cell, being taunted by a fellow inmate. Somehow, though, you get swept up in a desperate escape attempt by the emperor and his loyal retinue of protectors. The emperor, voiced unmistakably by Patrick Stewart (Star Trek: The Next Generation, X-Men), recognizes you from a portentous dream and entrusts you with the search for his illegitimate heir. But first, you'll need to escape from the Imperial City's sewers. As you make your way through this basic dungeon crawl, you happen upon ill-fated adventurers, their stuff, and some ornery goblins, so you immediately get to play around with close combat, ranged attacks, magic, sneaking, lock picking, equipment repairing, and more. How you survive is up to you--it's just as viable to kill your enemies with destructive magic, weapons, or bare hands as it is to sneak or run right past them. And even though the sewer setting might sound unimaginative, the quality of the game's visuals, the exceptionally good atmospheric sound effects, and the realistic physics all serve to quickly draw you in."
Permalink.

<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 Next >>

Looking for more Elder Scrolls or Oblivion stuff?
All content and images are copyright © TES4: Oblivion Portal 2004-2010,
or their respective owners, and cannot be reproduced without prior written consent.