Cheap The Elder Scrolls 3: Morrowind Game of the Year Edition (Video Games) (Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows Me, Windows XP, Windows 95) Price
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$19.99
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| PLATFORM: | Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows Me, Windows XP, Windows 95 |
| AGE GROUP: | 12 years and up |
| CATEGORY: | Video Games |
| MANUFACTURER: | Bethesda Softworks |
| ESRB RATING: | Teen |
| FEATURES: | Bundle of popular RPG and two expansion sets, Adds 80 hours of gameplay and quests beyond Morrowind, Explore the tundra of Solstheim and the cities of Mournhold and Sotha Sil, Many new monsters, For one player |
| MEDIA: | CD-ROM |
| ACCESSORIES: | |
| UPC: | 093155118409 |
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Customer Reviews of The Elder Scrolls 3: Morrowind Game of the Year Edition
Immersive RPG This game is 5/5 for fun. Overall I give it 4/5 for some gripes with the overall gameplay, and the frequent crashes. Also, it comes with no printed manual or materials whatsoever. It is literally a plain box with a single dvd inside. The manual can be found in PDF format on the disc. <
>I enjoyed the freeform deign and ability to do whatever you want. Join factions, do the main quest, or just hunt for artifacts in tombs and ruins. Some of the 26 or so skills are sort of useless, and I think the game's overall choice of making a fighter, a mage, or a thief are unbalanced, with fighter being the most powerful. However this isn't such a flaw because one of the game's best features is the custom class creation. So if you want to be a mage but find that a "pure" mage is too weak, you can have a mage that wears heavy armor, uses longswords, and has sneaking skills. The freedom is a great feature, maybe the best one. The story is great, and the "culture" of the setting feals realistic and so do the many towns, cities, and places. Another plus is that the dialouge is textual, not spoken. Some people complain about this, but it leaves you free to overlay whatever inflections or accents you want over the text using your imagination, as opposed to hearing the same recording over and over. The graphics are very good, considering the game's 6 years old, you may be surprised by how well the overall appearance of the game has kept up with today's expectations. Most PCs should be able to run it with all full settings. The bodies don't look good, however. It doesn't natively support widescreen aspect ratios, but you can edit the registry or get a 3rd part program to change the settings for you. The music is excellent, although it can be annoying when the game's music engine interrupts the "explore" track with a "battle" track simply because a little creature runs past your feet. Overall, I highly reccomend this game for its depth freedom, and replay value. It has tons of backstory and lore for people interested by the "culture" of Morrowind, as well as over 200 in-game, readable books, plays, notes, and scrolls. In other words, you can get sucked into the culture and lore if that's your style, or you can totally ignore it with no affect on your ability to complete the quests.
The God of RPGs!!!!
I got this game little more than a year ago and i havent even beat it! I just wanted to make a new character and see what would happen. The thing is that Morrowind is so, so real. I have never such a more realistic game. Its got great music, great story line, hundreds of side quests, great combat, and a just desinges!
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After many years, it keeps on giving...
I first played Morrowind on the Xbox and enjoyed it. On the PC its just as good if not better. The expansions make the world of Morrowind a bit more interesting. If you can't upgrade to Oblivion, Morrowind still does the trick.