No thanks. Part of the fun of Elder Scrolls is class experimentation. I'd rather not lock myself to one playstyle for the length of time an MMO requires.
Same here. The titles Morrowind and Oblivion gave you an idea of what to look forward to. If they name it Skyrim for example, my imagination will be filled with longships, tundra, and mead halls. And leggy Nord lasses. I just hope we get a unique and interesting world like Morrowind as opposed to the relatively bland and unambitious worlds in Oblivion and even Fallout 3. It doesn't need to feel alien, just interesting and unique.EHKOS said:You know what I'm anxious about? The new name for the fifth one.
Hi,carpathic said:Oh please no.
Just keep it a CRPG with no online content.
I really don't like MMO's and wont buy this property.
I agree. An MMO inevitably has a smaller focus on story, although the class system from elder scrolls, introduced into an mmo, would be extremely entertaining.Stabby Joe said:Bad news, I want a real Elder Scrolls V.
*pedo smile* Say it!greenflash said:What?
do you see this too?
THIS IS CRAZY? ( not going to say it)
Exactly. Brink is a game that brags about breaking down the wall between single player and multi-player, blending this and that seemlessly together. This achievement might be realized through certain MMO-related code-wrangling. I'm not too unsettled by this at all.Selvec said:I mean, isn't that company making Brink also goverened by ZeniMax?