The autumn forest around Riften. Absolutely beautiful, especially in the Special Edition.
Blackreach, Forgotten Vale, Soul Cairn. Those are just a few examples.
I'm not sure if I would call it massive cities, but the closest city to be a massive city with a breath taking view is Markarth mostly for being located on top of the ruins of an Ancient Dwemer city with the surrounding hills/mountains.
But my favorite site that has a breath taking view is the Lost Valley Redoubt and after you have fighting the Forsworn there the reward is not only the loot, but amazing view of the landscape at least when it is not raining.
Markarth is a sight, even if its not a particularly pleasant place. Solitude is a nicer place and definitely worth a look. But its the sheer scope of the game thats impressive rather than individual areas, the cities worldspaces are quite small honestly.
Novigard in Skyrim? What kind of location is that, must be from a mod?
And you would need a mega super computer for that.
Or just play Daggerfall
that lake up river from Riverwood (where you can build lakeview) is pretty nice.. and the view from the top of Throat of the World is amazing
a quick question though:
if you have never play an RPG, how are you familiar with Novigrad?
just curious
Skyrim. All of it.
You're there.
Explore at your leisure.
Go where your character's desires and quests send you.
A change in weather and time can transform a bleak uninspiring area into a breathtaking view.
so, you have played RPGs then
and Novigrad runs fine because of how different the games are.. in Skyrim, you can interact with any object (you can pick of a bowl and throw it at people, grab any sword mounted on the wall, and drag objects or bodies around with you as long as you want, or just try and make a house of cards out of spare daggers).. that is alot more resource intensive than the Witchers static environments