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Starfield: Why It Didn t Show Up At E3 2019

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Revision as of 15:16, 26 January 2026 by DanielaGuy50628 (talk | contribs)


There was also mention that NPCs and the cities they reside in would play a larger role in Starfield. This could simply mean larger cities with more NPCs, but it could also imply that cities and the NPCs that inhabit them will have more depth, unique mechanics, and adapt to the player’s actions and progress in the main storyl


Following that was a worryingly-long segment dedicated to Bethesda’s terribly-structured, microtransaction-laden mobile title Elder Scrolls: Blades . The presenters were chided on Twitter for insinuating that we all love mobile games—a great deal of us don’t—and the whole thing culminated with the announcement that Blades would be making its way to the Nintendo Switch sometime this fall, which still isn’t reason enough to check it


This development raises a lot of questions about the future of a lot of Bethesda projects. The two biggest Bethesda games on the horizon, Starfield and The Elder Scrolls 6 , were both announced back in 2018 during E3. Both projects got brief announcement trailers, and both fell to radio silence over the two years that have passed since, with only brief indications they're still in development serving as news updates. The Microsoft buyout makes the status of Starfield and TES 6 on PS5 unclear, too, which is further complicating the fact that fans still know next to nothing about either g


Yet, some are speculating that Starfield Ships|https://starfieldgalaxy.com/ ’s development could be further slowed by Bethesda’s refusal to move on from the dated Creation Engine. The system, which was used to develop The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim in 2011 and was based on the incredibly old Gamebryo engine, is really beginning to show its age, and it could very well be that even a heavily modified Creation Engine will struggle to support such an ambitious project. We know that Fallout 76 could hardly handle the demands of online play, let alone Todd Howard’s infamous "sixteen times the detail" lark, and it’s hard to imagine that something fantastically larger in scope and scale could possibly keep up on an outdated framew


Bethesda's Starfield was the most exciting E3 announcement no one talked about. To be fair, Bethesda delivered a lot of chat-worthy things at its E3 presentation. Fallout 76 made headlines for taking the series in an MMO direction. A new Elder Scrolls game was finally announced. And Keegan-Michael Key even showed up in a hilarious reference to the Skyrim meme. With all of those amazing things, the news that Bethesda is creating an entirely new, next-gen IP sort of slipped under the radar. Well now its time to learn more about Starfie


In Skyrim, you could become almost anything and everything at the same time, and in Fallout: New Vegas , your allegiances determined what direction that story would ultimately go in. Bethesda needs to take those two things and apply and refine them for the world at large. If I join the Dark Brotherhood, that should directly affect the way I'm seen by other people, factions, and individuals. Maybe the Thieves Guild doesn't care that I'm an assassin on the sideline, but that also doesn't mean I should so easily be welcomed amongst the Imperial forces. Small things like this break immersion and make me feel too powerful. Things like this remind me that I'm in a "game" world -- a world that responds to me unnaturally -- versus a world that feels alive and reacts ore noticeably to what I


What I'm proposing is that The Elder Scrolls VI should have a multitude of areas in the overworld where players can customize and create their own town and kingdom of sorts: refine and expand the tools given to players in Fallout 4 and apply them here. I think the game should allow players to truly personify their own town: perhaps you can build a town that houses the wicked, like werewolves, vampires, members of The Dark Brotherhood and more, or perhaps you could build something more conventional. All I'm suggesting is that if this mechanic is done well, players should be able to give their areas a sense of individual


If Bethesda Game Studios wishes to remain as relevant as they are in the western role-playing space at the moment, they'll need to rethink their approach to the genre with their two upcoming titles, Starfield and The Elder Scrolls VI , if they want to continue setting the standard that they're known


It's hard to say exactly what this will mean for the games until fans can learn anything at all about them. Howard mentions that the next-gen technology is " optimized for the vast worlds we love to create ," and given Bethesda's commitment to producing larger worlds for each successive game in the Elder Scrolls franchise, it can likely be expected that both of the upcoming titles will feature open worlds on a truly impressive scale . The precise details of what else these new engine overhauls will bring are completely unkn


Bethesda’s 2018 E3 showing was one for the ages; Doom Eternal, Rage 2, Starfield , Fallout 76 , and The Elder Scrolls VI were all shown in some capacity, and, when it came to topping last year’s efforts, Bethesda certainly had their work cut out for them. Were we destined to get a look at the Maryland-based developer’s new, mysterious science fiction IP? No, of course