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Ewok's RPG Recommendations

Ewok's RPG Recommendations

Ewok Recommends:

The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim

The fifth game in the Bethesda's popular Elder Scrolls series and, arguably, the best. The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim is a fantasy epic of Dragons and magic, set amidst a backdrop of civil war and taking place in a huge, fully explorable, open world.

Skyrim is a never ending time-sink. In addition to the main quest of prophecy and Dragon-slaying, there are a further five substantial quest lines (more including DLC expansions), each tied to a specific faction, the length of each putting entire games to shame. That's just the 'main' quest threads: Skyrim features so many side quests that you can't walk from one objective to the next without picking up two or three more missions.

To put into an easy-to-understand context: I have played around 150 hours of Skyrim and have completed three of the available six factional quest threads. I have not completed the main quest and am still playing. Take into account several quests have multiple solutions, that you can ignore quests entirely and just explore the huge world and the fact that playing a game with a different character class is a completely different experience and Skyrim is probably the only game you need ever play... Until The Elder Scrolls VI of course.

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Fallout: New Vegas

Another Bethesda title, but this time with the development reigns handed over to Obsidian Entertainment. Fallout: New Vegas is similar to Skyrim in that it features a mind-boggling number of available quests and gigantic open world. However. New Vegas trades the fantastical expanses of Skyrim for the post-nuclear apocalypse of the Mohave Desert and swaps the swords and spells for guns and baseball bats.

There are four different ways to align yourself during the main quest and the drastically changes the way the game unfolds, thereby demanding at least four playthroughs. While prospective players may have been put off by the multitude of bug reports following the game's release, rest assured the worst has been patched away over the years and New Vegas is stable and ready to eat your life.

Mass Effect 3

The concluding part of BioWare's sci-fi space opera pits your Commander Shepherd against the greatest thread the galaxy has ever faced, as the entire cosmos erupts into open war against the nigh-unstoppable Reaper menace.

More restricted in scope than the previous two entries, Mass Effect 3 still has numerous distractions to grab your interest on the path to saving the galaxy, and the tighter structure allows for excellent scripting and storytelling. Combat is excellent, combining tactical thought with twitch reflexes seamlessly.

There was some controversy over the ending, which I honestly didn't get, but BioWare have since patched in an extended ending to address player feedback. It's definitely worth seeing the series out, but if you managed to miss the first two you can now get your hands on the Mass Effect Trilogy release. Well worth it.

Ross D. Brown

Ross D. Brown

Writer

Ross has been with GameGrin since February 2012 and acted as Site Editor until late 2014. He is also a proud Northerner.

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COMMENTS

Emseypenguin
Emseypenguin - 03:04pm, 18th July 2016

Skyrim is the bestest!! I actually haven't played either of the others, despite loving Fallout 3. I got Mass Effect 3 as my Sim City freebie but want to play the prequels first on pc as I've only ever played em on xbox.

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Ewok
Ewok - 03:04pm, 18th July 2016 Author

All three Mass Effects are great games. The first has a few rough edges - mainly the Mako missions and slightly ropier combat - but it's still probably the high point in terms of plot pacing and the fact that this is where you'll first get to define Shephard in your own terms. ME2 slimmed down the RPG elements from the first, making it less cluttered, but boosting the action elements putting it on the level of most third-person shooters in terms of polish. ME3 is the best of both worlds, a little more depth in the RPG mechanics than ME2, but with action that stands up on it's own. All three have great writing and excellent voice acting and it's worth playing all three to get the full story. My one gripe is that there is a couple of pieces of DLC for ME2 and if you don't play them there is a massive gap in the plot between 2 and 3 - but spoilers prevent me saying more than this. I'm not sure, but I think the'Trilogy' edition comes bundled with all the ME1 and 2 DLCs.

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Emseypenguin
Emseypenguin - 03:04pm, 18th July 2016

I might wait for an origin sale (and money) and get em

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Ewok
Ewok - 03:04pm, 18th July 2016 Author

Worth it - but bear in mind they are LOOONG games if you are tempted to do them back-to-back.

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