All of the creatures in the game have scripts running on them. So it by nature has to be scripted. So then one of two possible scenarios were used:
1. Either Bethesda wrote some additional coding in order to make these scenes work out the way they did OR
2. The playtesters were required to film (using FRAPS or something like that) everything they did in their games for days and days. And they just took the most interesting dragon bits and edited them together to create this movie.
Either way, it's scripted. But what people are trying to actually ask is "Did this battle happen just like that?" or "Was it arranged to LOOK like it happened just like that?" In which case I think the answer is the LATTER question.
You can take tons of film when crafting a movie, but you only edit together the best parts that are the most interesting.... doesn't mean you didn't shoot them, but they might not have even been shot the same day, but then in editing them they are worked to create the illusion that this all happened naturally one after another. I think Bethesda is only guilty of EDITING their footage ... but I don't they are guilty of FAKING their footage. I think someone there was playing those exact scenes, but later the Director of this video is the one that put them all together to make what we saw, which is essentially a more interesting compilation of what actually can occur in the game.
I'm sure the dragon flying off toward the mountain was a real thing that happened to SOMEONE ... but who knows how many times they ran around filming that before someone got that scene to naturally occur?
Also, one guy complained that "how could that guy run down the hill and then the dragon follows him right to the edge?" Who says it ever worked that way to begin within? Maybe those clips are unrelated and just edited to APPEAR related.... Perhaps, again using my theory, when they saw that one of their playtesters had recorded a battle near the edge of the cliff, the video Director said "okay, I need some footage in game of the player running down the hill so we can sort of try to make it look like he's being chased" ... so yeah, that would be staged, but it's still coming from in game footage filmed after the dragon battle but edited PRIOR to the dragon battle to try and tell a story. Then he said "Can anyone get some footage of him shouting over the body of the dead dragon?" and the playtester go back to work recording more footage ...
Random footage tossed around (like a limp salad) just won't be as interesting as a solid (piece of steak) story is to our minds as consumers ...
I don't blame them one bit. I don't feel lied to or cheated. I understand as a consumer that some parts of a multi-million dollar epic RPG game's trailer videos are going to be EDITED (not faked!) to create a more impressive feeling for me, it's just SALES, people. There will always be SALES .... try to get past that, and just enjoy what they've given us... a really cool window into the game that can keep us happy for at least another month, when they can release another tidbit to enjoy....
Thanks.
1. Either Bethesda wrote some additional coding in order to make these scenes work out the way they did OR
2. The playtesters were required to film (using FRAPS or something like that) everything they did in their games for days and days. And they just took the most interesting dragon bits and edited them together to create this movie.
Either way, it's scripted. But what people are trying to actually ask is "Did this battle happen just like that?" or "Was it arranged to LOOK like it happened just like that?" In which case I think the answer is the LATTER question.
You can take tons of film when crafting a movie, but you only edit together the best parts that are the most interesting.... doesn't mean you didn't shoot them, but they might not have even been shot the same day, but then in editing them they are worked to create the illusion that this all happened naturally one after another. I think Bethesda is only guilty of EDITING their footage ... but I don't they are guilty of FAKING their footage. I think someone there was playing those exact scenes, but later the Director of this video is the one that put them all together to make what we saw, which is essentially a more interesting compilation of what actually can occur in the game.
I'm sure the dragon flying off toward the mountain was a real thing that happened to SOMEONE ... but who knows how many times they ran around filming that before someone got that scene to naturally occur?
Also, one guy complained that "how could that guy run down the hill and then the dragon follows him right to the edge?" Who says it ever worked that way to begin within? Maybe those clips are unrelated and just edited to APPEAR related.... Perhaps, again using my theory, when they saw that one of their playtesters had recorded a battle near the edge of the cliff, the video Director said "okay, I need some footage in game of the player running down the hill so we can sort of try to make it look like he's being chased" ... so yeah, that would be staged, but it's still coming from in game footage filmed after the dragon battle but edited PRIOR to the dragon battle to try and tell a story. Then he said "Can anyone get some footage of him shouting over the body of the dead dragon?" and the playtester go back to work recording more footage ...
Random footage tossed around (like a limp salad) just won't be as interesting as a solid (piece of steak) story is to our minds as consumers ...
I don't blame them one bit. I don't feel lied to or cheated. I understand as a consumer that some parts of a multi-million dollar epic RPG game's trailer videos are going to be EDITED (not faked!) to create a more impressive feeling for me, it's just SALES, people. There will always be SALES .... try to get past that, and just enjoy what they've given us... a really cool window into the game that can keep us happy for at least another month, when they can release another tidbit to enjoy....
Thanks.
I was going to make this post, but you said it way better than I could have.