What difficulty should i play skyrim on
A lot of people here have played the game double-digit times and forget what it was like the first time. To me the game was meant to be fairly easy going whereas you're encouraged to explore but may well get your rear-end handed to you with some enemies -- such the perils of sticking your nose into caves and ruins. If you're enjoying the game, I'd stick with vanilla as many have for many hours before modding.
But if not, the world of modding really changes the game for better and worse. That kind of difficulty require modding. Last edited by raubrey ; 21 Sep, pm. Legendary is madness. Half naked human takes, no joke, 50 arrorws. Dragonborn vampierlord in steelarmor with magic takes 1.
Yeah, it's not the difficulty of Legendary that bothers me Requiem is one of my all-time favourite mods, and I play as an Altmer mage with no armour and only HP which is more 'suicidal' than any Legendary setting , it's the fact that it makes NO sense.
I'm supposedly some kind of goddess on Nirn, yet I am weaker than literally every other human, elf etc I might ever be likely to fight? Even in steel plate armour with elven weapons going up against bandits in fur kilts with crappy iron daggers and hunting bows? Nah, that's not 'difficult', it's just silly. RIP Oderous Urungus.
This is defiantly a problem on my previous play through, I had diversified my skills too much. It just made it a chore to play. I mean, I like the idea of a harder difficulty just for that sense of survival. User Info: Bane Start easy then change it if it's too easy.
You DON'T have to leave it the same. You can change the difficulty at any time. User Info: jfmorris. Depends on your build. Certain types of characters are easier to play than others, at least in the early stages. Stealth play, for example, is basically easy mode. Sneaking is a very powerful skill and quite easy to level, and the stealth damage bonuses available from perks are ridiculously overpowered.
If you're going to play a stealthy assassin, I'd set the difficulty at least on Expert, if not Master. Warriors, on the other hand, are tougher to play. Eventually they become tanks, but from about levels on Master difficulty, warrior can be a tough and frustrating playstyle, since your only tactical option is to walk right up to the enemy and bash them in the face.
Novice -- Novice is the easiest setting, but you should still expect a challenge if you're a first-timer. Large, powerful enemies like dragons are still not to be taken lightly. Apprentice -- If you're a first-timer but you're OK with being regularly challenged by your surroundings, the Apprentice setting is a good option.
Adept - Skyrim's "default" difficulty setting. Expert -- As the name of this setting implies, you should expect a workout on this level. Master -- "Master" is reserved for, well, Skyrim masters. At this level, even mundane encounters with small foes can prove very dangerous. Legendary -- If you know the ins and outs of everything Skyrim has to offer, you may as well give the Legendary difficulty level a try.
Beware: A single misstep in a fight against the lowliest of wolves may bring about your end. That's what makes it a game and not a toy. Skyrim has rules than most games, but it does have rules. I have been playing on Master difficulty since the beginning.
I am enjoying the game very much. I have to say though, the 1. I hate Bethesda's random difficulty spike. Hence I keep it stupid easy and increase difficulty as I grow more powerful. Currently playing Adept and about to go for Expert. I agree that high difficulty makes me learn the ins and outs of a game way better, forcing me to use consumbles and special powers to their full effect. I play on adept which im not sure if thats the "normal setting" or not.
I do find the diffifulty to be just right. Having to block against bandits in combat and counterattacking while just beating the crap out of wolves is just the right amount of challenge for me.
I do try to kill off giants when i find them which would lead to a couple of retries and dying over and over and quick loading until i can develop a viable strategy Then circle strafing while whacking my mace at them to avoid getting hit good in third person perspective, not recommended in FP , except for the occasional AOE ground pound almost unavoidable when fighting up close to giants unless you are at far enough distance from them while they wind up the attack while also counter blocking with a shield bash and yelling Fire at their asses Maybe for melee classes, but for a pure mage, playing on master isn't viable.
Unless you intend on letting your conjuration or companion do all the work. On my main character I'm playing on adept, but I did make another character and play on master it was actually pretty fun. It's different sensations, and lower levels can be hard, but it really does make me stop and think about how I'm going to take enemies down, using shouts and blocking and power attacks and companions. I guess one thing that kind of evens out the difficulty is that I play on adept by myself, whereas I almost always have a companion while I play on master.
The only time I've really felt like I needed to turn the difficulty down was when I was kinda stuck in a quest way above my level, and was surrounded by ridiculously tough enemies in an encounter. The thing I love about this game is that you can create a viable Battle Mage character with the way the leveling system works You just keep doing a skill and then it increases.
You can be a Light Armor wearing battle mage if you want. There are light armors in this game that can specifically increase certain spell types. Playing on master with my dmg deadric greatsword pretty much makes it a cakewalk, if it weren't for my zero magical resistance.
Mages pretty much 1 - 2 shot me. Actually it's only the few exceptions like Gears of War 3 where it's stated that "normal" isn't for fans that the game is not "meant" to be played on normal. Of course it's not a curated FPS experience, it's an RPG that is reliant upon playstyle to dictate difficulty a lot of the time.
So yeah play on whatever one fits and move on. Getting one shot by a mage is not "challenging"; it is stupid. Especially with the broken resists.
At least before you could chug some potions and get some frost resist or whatever.
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