We don't know about Elder Scrolls VI, but the series' MMO, The Elder Scrolls Online: Tamriel Unlimited, (re)launches on PC on March 17, with Xbox One and PlayStation 4 versions due in June. Or Modern Wolfenstein 2: Rise of Robo-Goebbels. Or, Bethesda can do what they most likely will end up doing: standing on stage, unveiling a new Elder Scrolls game set in a barren sandy wasteland in which you and everyone around you is under constant threat from an airborne bird flu-like virus. Keep all the violence and drama and duplicitousness and assassinations and what have you in, they're key to the experience, but put all of those things in an environment that's as bleak as the subjects they hold and all you're left with is a taxing experience with none of the glee that draws you to these kinds of things in the first place. Nothing is more depressing than the cold, and now that the "snow one" is out of the way Bethesda can concentrate on making something that's a bit cheerier. All quest lines, all achievements, all everything with bells on. We have almost nothing to go on at this point other than the fact that the game does exist, and that Bethesda are working on it. It had been a while since I'd played either, and I knew in my head which one I preferred, but wanted to give them an intensive run through. The Elder Scrolls VI has been revealed at E3 2018. Recently, buoyed by these rumors and my festering unemployment, I decided to play the past two Elder Scrolls games back to back: 2006's Oblivion and then Skyrim. Perhaps Bethesda will fob off ES6 entirely, and exclusively focus on another Fallout game that I won't play. There's a bag of Reddit-based whispers that the next game will be set in the Black Marsh, home of gravelly voiced reptilian race the Argonians, but most of these have been poopooed. It, naturally, hasn't been confirmed what exactly it is they'll be showcasing this year, but beside the hype for a fourth Fallout proper, rumors abound of a new Elder Scrolls game, the next in line after the goblin tundra of 2011's Skyrim. The company is promising something big this year, hosting their first ever conference at theā¦ conference, and getting fans hyped the fuck up. Bethesda is responsible for the Fallout series, and acquired the Wolfenstein franchise in 2014. One publisher with its bright red balls clenched in its fist this year is Bethesda Softworks.
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