User blog comment:Draevan13/Thoughts on TES IV: Oblivion./@comment-3206382-20130310002307

IMO, Oblivion was the most enjoyable game out of the series, and my favourite game of all time. The main quest was pretty good, the side quests were actually fleshed out opposed to Skyrim's bland "kill that, go there, talk to X" kind of thing and back in 2006, the graphics were better than anything I've played back then. On the downside it has an awkward combat system, horrible horrible horrible faces and boring caves. Besides you were just an ordinary guy that had an amazing amount of bad luck and ended up fighting off a daedric invasion, without any superpowers like being a demigod incarnation or legendary dragonborn.

Skyrim is just a well worked out combat system and has incredible graphics, not to mention the first TES game that had actually awesome vanilla armours (the first one who wants to defend Oblivion there, *cough*everydamnhelmetinthegame*cough*). But it has pretty much no good quests (Dawnguard is about the only decent questline, leaving aside the mindnumbing Soul Cairn epxerience, Dragonborn MQ was laughably bad), there's a notable lack of immersion and the shouts havel little to no use. Best use of the game is to just travel around, explore it's beauty and don't pay too much attention to any quests. It makes the game much more enjoyable. Oh and dragons, how cliché is that?

Morrowind, eh I honestly don't really care about it that much. I love medieval European rpg's, and these days it's hard to call a TES game an rpg. Daggerfall and Arena had already laid out the TES world as it should have been for me way back. I was actually pretty dissapointed when Morrowind was something totally fantasy and I never really related to the game. It had an awesome musical score, good graphics, good quests (well, after the patch for the journal) and so on, but like I said, I never really related to the game.