this post was submitted on 02 Jun 2024
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100%. I get baffled that Starfield gets so much hate, but then some of my favorite games aren't very popular (Book of Hours anyone? lol)
Yeah. Outer world was in reality the polar opposite of Starfield. A game that was excessively theme-driven but had lackluster "everything else" to go with it. A little (less than Outer Worlds used) bit of tongue-in-cheek "Spacer's Choice" could have worked like Vault Boy does in Fallout, and I wish Starfield had done something like that. But on story and gameplay alone, Starfield destroys Outer Worlds.
This is the funny part. If I had to describe why I love Starfield to someone who had been living under a rock and hadn't ever heard of it, I'd say "because it's like Skyrim in space". In so many ways, if I'm being honest.
The thing is, the biggest critique people have against Starfield isn't all the crazy bugs (we remember those from Skyrim) or the really tropey shit, some skyrimmy feature it's missing, or anything in between. It's that they don't find Starfield "fun" in this hard-to-place sort of way. Perhaps that's you? If so, maybe you can see how someone would feel about Starfield if, for some reason, it clicked as fun from the start.
Now, I have some complaints about Starfield. But most of them have to do with things that Skyrim didn't even try (the shipbuilder, which I hear has improved of late) or the lategame (which means I got my fun out of it).
Also, I've learned not to take downvotes too badly most of the time. Everyone has opinions, and just because I reserve downvote for the rare "this person is an absolute idiot" doesn't mean other people do :)
Yeah I'd say it was an issue of not "clicking" at first, but I think I defined it a bit more before I dropped my first playthrough. For me, the primary appeal of a Bethesda RPG is that "take off in a direction, you'll find a story" feel. Starfield kinda has it, but they broke it up with weird design choices. The insanely frequent, lengthy cutscenes cut into the continuous flow. Having to travel at all between planets broke up the action and flow. The choice to use procedural generation was odd and really took away from the more intentional feel of prior Bethesda games, and really cut away some of the quality and quantity of environmental storytelling.
That's my very surface level opinions from what I remember. It's been a minute since I played it at release.
I don't entirely disagree.
You mean the ship going into warp or landing loading screen? There aren't really a ton of cutscenes. If I had to give a tedious downside, it would be the "power minigame" but at least it ends with a violent encounter with a strongish enemy 9 times out of 10
See, THIS might be where my age plays me. My first Bethesda game was called "Arena", and it was all procedural. My second Bethesda game was "Daggerfall" and it was ABSURDLY huge procedural. I've never seen some procedural elements as a downside to extend the plot (and in fact, Skyrim's radiant quest system is procedure), as long as there was sufficient hand-made content.
Now here's the thing. By all reports (both self-reports that can be questioned, but also people who dug into game files), Starfield has more handmade content than Skyrim. It's just that the thousand planets above and beyond that were procedural. I LIKE that balance. A lot. It solves the "Morrowind problem" (Morrowind was slammed at first because the world was SO much smaller than Daggerfall's) for me while still giving you 60-80 hours of handcrafted stories, characters, maps, etc. But I can see how other people who dive into into the procedural content might step back and say "boy this game is so reptitious". Sometimes our gameplay loops define our enjoyment. I know I hated Persona 2 for years for the dumbest reason ever - I got addicted to the casino minigame and lost track of the story, then found the casino game too tedious and I had no desire to play the game anymore.