» Sun Dec 04, 2011 10:52 am
I definitely think Morrowind had a more unique and bizzare feel, though one thing I don't like in comparisons of OB to Morrowind is when people say everything in OB looked the same and had no diversity. I mean in terms of landscapes, Morrowind looked brown, twisted and alien pretty much everywhere, except the dull ashlands, same as Oblivion looked European most places. And for the architecture, Oblivion may have somewhat less diversity than Morrowind (though more actual distinct styles) but you couldn't say they all look the same. You could say Chorrol, Cheydinhal and Skingrad are fairly similar sort of European styles (Skingrad being the weakest link) but you couldn't say any of those was like Bravil, or that Anvil looked like Cheydinhal, Leyawiin looked like Bruma, etc. and the Ayleid style in the Imperial City and ruins is just as unique as, say, Hlaalu.
Skyrim, I have some concerns that some aspects may be too similar to Oblivion, or too one-note Nordic, but from what we've seen so far, there seems to be a fair bit of diversity. Solitude looks like Imperial style, Markarth is rather unique, Riften is fairly typical but has a nice feel, and a Dunmer city sounds promising. I do think the feel of Skyrim will be stronger, Oblivion, TBH, doesn't have a terribly strong mood with it. I guess the best word would be "majestic", but the feeling does not come off as strong as Skyrim or Morrowind. And I know Todd has been pretty repetitive with his explanation of the feel, but sometimes there isn't really a lot of different words to describe something. I mean even Morrowind, I barely here anything used to describe the feel other than "alien".