Skyrim makes an Orc feel right at home

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Tuesday, November 29, 2011
EDITOR'S NOTEfrom Eduardo Moutinho

Choosing between a Nord and another race was the toughest decision I've had to make during my still-in-progress Skyrim journey. Chris' experience truly highlights the amazing replay value and depth of Bethesda's masterpiece.

While exploring a random pocket of Skyrim, I noticed an unfamiliar icon in my navigation bar. I’m glad I decided to investigate, as it turned out to be one of my favorite moments in The Elder Scrolls 5: Skyrim so far.

A fellow green-skinned Orc greeted me as I approached the recently stumbled-upon stronghold and invited me inside without any hesitation. This NPC gave me special treatment based on the type of character I’d created.

As in other RPGs of its kind, the first major decision you make in Skyrim regards your ancestry. One could expect that the decision would have no effect on the protagonist’s place in the world and that NPCs wouldn’t give any thought to what you are, whether human, elf, or lizard-man.

 

Given the setting, a Nord would fit the bill. It even seemed like the default choice was the game’s way of saying, “Hey, you’ll be seeing these guys a lot around Skyrim."

"Maybe you should try to fit in a little.”

It would be fair of Bethesda to give additional attention to the Nords and maybe the Imperials, seeing as they both have a dominating presence over this particular part of Tamriel, just as the Dunmer were featured prominently in The Elder Scrolls 3: Morrowind.

Including exclusive quests or extra lines of dialogue for each of the title's 10 playable races would be quite an intimidating task. A difference in skills is enough for some, and the limelight you’re given for all the Dragonborn business makes you feel unique regardless of your character choices.

But I personally appreciated it when one of my own kind extended a warm welcome when others would have been met with caution and sent on a quest before gaining entry to the hold. The guard even commented on the fact that I’d been living in the city too long, away from the Orcs' culture. I was able to learn a lot about traditions and values from the people within.

Touches like this allow for a certain element to emerge that open-world RPGs sometimes forget about: role playing. I’m not just a blank, green-skinned avatar who just so happens to have an ability that modifies damage dealt and damage taken. My character is a city Orc who found himself in the land of Skyrim, which as it turns out, might be his true home. And his journey has gotten him in touch with the traditional Orcish values that he might have lost by being away from his people for so long.

The Elder Scrolls 5: Skyrim allows me to be that Orc. Having not played the other races, I can’t speak for them. But I hope that other players have had similar immersive experiences, even as small and seemingly insignificant as an NPC acknowledging their heritage.

 
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Comments (9)
Christian_profile_pic
November 29, 2011

Love it. I got in a ridiculous nerd fight with my friend the other because he's min-maxing, exploiting, and doing everything he can in the game in one go -- he's primarily a mage but he trains the maximum-allowed five times per level in almost every skill, climbs to the top of every faction, all with the same character. I was haranguing him incessently, "But what are his reasons for doing these things?"

"I get so much sneak attack damage with bows and daggers! I can turn into a werewolf! I have 50 points in archery!"

"Those are YOUR reasons; what are HIS reasons? Was his father a hunter? Was he a poacher before becoming a mage? Is that why he was arrested at the beginning?"

"...... :-\"

I can't fathom playing these games like that, but to each their own I guess. My character has backstory, motivations, convictions. I'm not writing a fan-fic novel or anything but I've come up with just enough to give him direction without exploiting the entire game in one go, which, from an in-world perspective, only a true sociopath would do.

EDIT: But it does sound like your Orc has a more interesting time than my Breton. After hearing about everything that's happened to Morrowind since Oblivion, I regret not choosing a Dark Elf. Next time, I suppose....

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November 29, 2011

Yeah, there's a place for min-maxing in games like Dark Souls, but you can get so much more out of Skyrim if you try and integrate yourself into its setting. It's the difference between playing as part of a rich story, and playing just to crunch the numbers and grab the achievements. Not that there's anything wrong with the latter, but Skyrim doesn't seem to be that type of game. And that's coming from someone who usually min-maxes like crazy.

I've also avoided the mage and thief guilds, the Dark Brotherhood, and especially becoming a werewolf (that's where the Companions and I had a serious falling out). I will play through these quest lines eventually, but on a different character. They just aren't my Orc's style.

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November 29, 2011

I actually feel like Skyrim is LACKING the racial differences. The one time that actually impacted me about what race I was, was on the top of the Throat of the World, where they said, "You are no longer an Argonian. You are Dragonborn."

I don't know how it is with other races yet. I'm glad they did something for Orcs. Do Nords curse High Elves who talk to them? Do the Khajiit acknowledge their own kind? 

I would love to make a mod where racial comments are thrown around more frequently. "I'm a lizard in armor. Somebody acknowledge me!"

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November 29, 2011

That's a shame to hear. I was hoping that other races had at least some unique attention paid to them. You would think walking, talking lizards would turn a few heads, even in Tamriel.

Maybe it's something we'll see in future patch notes?

- Racism towards elves increased by 38%. We'll be monitoring this change and adding more hate as necessary.

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November 29, 2011

I'm playing as a boring Imperial, and the Stormcloaks don't trust me from the get go. I'd figure playing as a High Elf would cause everyone to keep their distance from me.

Or as I would hope.

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November 29, 2011

All these posts make me want to buy Skyrim even more. It sounds like the hip place where all the orcs and elves kick it.

Mindjack
November 30, 2011

You took the words out of my foul, orc mouth.

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November 29, 2011

I actually have a story similar to this. My caracter i play as is almost always a wood elf, and in skyrim, well.. I'm sure anybosy who's played the game will tell you the people of skyrim seem to hate all elvan kind, high elf or not. But when i made my way to windhelm, I stubbled across the Grey district, and was immidetly accepted in. What i mean by that is that people liked me there, they weren't worried. It's like they saw me as a fellow elf, Wood, high, or dark otherwise. Just thought I would share is all, hope it was mildly interesting.

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November 30, 2011

I'm a Khajiit and haven't noticed too much love from anyone but other than the caravan guys I've not noticed too many other Khajiit. They don't call me cat like so many humans do though, and I think a lot of NPCs view all Khajiit as thieves. In Dragon Age: Origins you do get some different responses from people based on your race and the opening origin stories for each one are great.

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