The personal note at the end was very touching. I’m glad you at least had a game you loved to give you an escape and some joy in difficult times. Wish you all the best in the future!
All so true, it's actually helping me right now through a difficult time, i decided to pick up the game again after a long time and all the good old memories of getting cracked out on skooma and punching everything to death came back, thanks Todd.
Absolutely. Same for me to be fair. I managed to get this game from a friend of mine that kinda out of pity decided to sell it to me for all the money i had, like 5 euros or something. I think i have never played a game so much as i did with oblivion. It was my only escape from a very miserable existance. I didn't solve my situation as mortismal did. I am financially stable but no friends or family, but nontheless i am very happy for him, and it is nice to leave a chapter of our life "officially behind" :D
The last bit about your relationship with Oblivion was very inspiring although I knew of it from watching your past videos. You are in a way Hero of Kvatch: starting out in rough situation and ending gloriously as a champion.
Man, we all remember the day we emerged from those tutorial sewers. Genuinely been chasing that same high ever since - no game has even come close to giving me that same sensation.
I think exiting the shrine of resurrection at the start of Breath of the Wild got close, but you're right - that first time in Oblivion just had a magic that we'll never get back.
Thanks for sharing that personal part of your life with us at the end. Playing video games to "escape" or find some sort of joy in an otherwise tumultuous part of life resonates very strongly with me personally, and I think it hits home with a lot of your viewers as well. Glad to hear that you were able to officially say "goodbye" to that part of your life!
I think I spent well over 200 hrs in the first year this came out. I remember being in year 12 (Final year of high school in Aus) and someone talking about the game. I used the library 'Study Period' time I had to research the game and wagged the rest of of the day (I think this was a Thursday as I wagged Friday too). Put the game in at 1pm - then it was all of a sudden it was 12am. A few years later, a friend was playing through it for the first time and I watched him play for about 50 hours. Game has attached itself to my soul along with STALKER and Fallout NV.
I also just remembered when I did the Dark Brotherhood and got to the cleanse mission. I refused to do it for about 2 weeks because I was so attached to the group. Sad really as retrospectively Emil's writing isn't great and it made no sense, but even now thinking about the Brotherhood, the ambient music that emphasised cold wet stone - leaves me looking at steam with the mouse hovering over the install button.
Ive seen people say this but with Skyrims favorite system that just lets you swap on the fly anyway it never really bothered me + the dual cast in Skyrim is awesome even if the spells on launch sucked
I think the spell system in Skyrim greatly expanded the diversity and just visual flair of using them. I agree having a button to cast a spell with both hands occupied is great, but the appearance of wielding a spell and sword, like a proper spellsword, just feels so badass. The only thing that really sucks is the lack of proper balancing and many spells being samey/copied and many having been removed like touch spells.
@@MortismalGaming I actually preferred hotkeys and a radial over the favorites menu. It pausing the game and having to scroll through a list was a huge headache. I ended up modding back in the radial and hotkeys into skyrim.
Was not ready for that surprising heartfelt and emotional bit and the end. That cut me pretty deep. Love your content brother, keep doing great things!
Man, those closing statements hit hard.. I'm glad you shared this, as this is something I did with a couple of old games I had played. And the fact that you skipped the "all that youtube jazz" part makes it even more powerful. That's what games are about, and you've driven the message home perfectly, thank you!
Discovering this game as a 12 year old is an experience that I'll never forget. I was shocked that I could just roam around in such a big world after leaving the prison. It really brings all the nostalgia on me, also that ost while roaming around the forests... I was always happy while playing this game.
Thank you for sharing that personal note at the end Mortym, very poetic way to close that chapter of your life and it's a credit to your character that you've come through all that pain to do amazing things, both in general and on this channel. I was also wondering, do you think you'll play the latest expansion for Underrail? It has a continuation from the original main game ending.
Fantastic review and loved that touching end segment. That's the double-edged sword with games as escapism. They take you to these fantastical alternate realities in the moment, but also take you back to those bad memories and headspaces when you replay them later. The role reverses, basically. That's my struggle with Dark Souls, so I replay it every year to try to form new positive memories to associate with it because I love the game itself so much.
So glad to see you doing these TES retrospectives! Oblivion was truly a formative game for me. I got it when was a teenager and around the time my family got internet for the first time really. I remember that it was the first game I played to 100% and I was obsessed with it. I spent my free time on the UESP wiki updating information and guides as well as on the Gamespot forums in an Oblivion fan group called Lords And Ladies of Oblivion lol. It's also the game that set me on my IT career path funny enough. I built my first PC to play Oblivion with money I made cutting grass and shoveling driveways. I got super into modding the game and back then there were not fancy mod managers you had to do everything manually. It forced me to learn a ton about how computer hardware and software worked and while it sounds funny now I literally had to troubleshoot my PC on a regular basis to get the game running. I built my analytical skills by trying to get Oblivion working! It's amazing how things work.
Just want to say that your final comments at the end of the video really moved me, and reminded me of my own past. While never homeless, I grew up with a lot of painful moments-divorces, my father’s alcoholism and eventual suicide, etc. It has always been games that were my escape, my rock. I have games I can remember playing at really rough times to distract me and help me cope. Today I am married with two beautiful kids, in a completely different place. I often revisit these old games to put a more positive memory on a great game, and to acknowledge how far I have come. I hear you. I feel you. I wish you all the best. We got this.
I almost cried at that last bit. Thanks for sharing that. It sounds like I didn't have it quite as tough as you did, but I did grow up in an abusive household. I played videogames to escape that. I didn't really have one game to latch onto like you did, although if I had to choose it would be a tie between Civ 5 and COD WAW, specifically the zombies mode. Its awesome to see just how much video games can mean to people. I'm happy you're doing much better now, and happy early birthday to your son. Sounds like he has an awesome dad :)
Okay my favorite random npc dialogue was after I went to sleep in an inn after killing the Grey Prince in the Arena I got a visit by Lucian Lachance after he tasked me to a kill a man and walks out of my room an npc approaches him while invisible and told him "Thry say if you kill someone the Dark Brotherhood comes to you in your sleep."
Oblivion is what really got me into gaming, which years later is still my main hobby! Gaming really helped me through a lot of difficult times in my life. Without it I don’t know where I’d be today, so it is really amazing to see an in depth retrospective from someone who was also impacted greatly by the game as a teen.
I think the fact that there are still so many discussions and video about Oblivion after 18 years from it's release really says about how special the game is. There are really somethings you can never get in other games.
Most excited I've ever been for one of your reviews. Thanks for covering this. I said it previously, but Oblivion is among my favourite games of all time and probably THE game of my childhood along with Ocarina of Time. I'm literally flipping my Imperial Septim from my Oblivion Collectors Edition as I watch. Praise be Akatosh and all the Divines, wander with wisdom etc.
I really appreciate the touching ending. Personal chapters don't need to mean much to anyone other than the person who experienced it, but sometimes something doesn't need to be for other people. Even if they do get something out of it too.
Man, I've watched your videos for a while now, so I'm well aware of your tough childhood, but it always sounds almost unreal to hear it again. I'm happy that nowadays, you can make a living doing what you love and I sincerely hope that you'll continue to be as successful with it as you currently are, if not more - you've definitely deserved it.
I totally understand. Skyrim has a special place in my heart. I played it modded all through undergrad and grad school. It brought me through a lot of tough times. Great video and great channel!
That note at the end hit home for me. I was only a few years younger than you when I got oblivion the first time, I remember I managed to get a special edition with a coin in it, still have the coin somewhere. Oblivion made me fall in love with RPGs, a love I still have till this day. Fallout 3 was also a huge part of my life in high school as well. I totally understand feeling like these games are friends man. I'm glad you're life's gotten better, your content has helped me with builds, research and much more. thanks for the work you do an for sharing your story so openly!
Thank you for sharing the personal moments from your life. It was really touching and heartfelt. I love your channel and your videos man. This is one of my favorites and provided a great escape as well!
Hey, just want say I really enjoy your thorough reviews, they're extremely well written, voiced, and edited. There are so many massive RPGs that I don't have the time to properly play through, so being able to watch your reviews helps give a lot of insight into these games or can even help me figure out which ones I would like to spend the time playing myself.
I really like the personal perspective you included. This game was also a beacon during a very dark time in my childhood too, and it’s so inspiring to see how far you’ve come and how you made this journey through the game a kind of therapy for you. Awesome work as always and I’m happy to be a subscriber and have found your content!
I bought a ps3 when I got clean from opiates back in the day to help occupy some of my time and have a new sober friend. Oblivion was the first game I got and played during that time and I loved it so much even though I screwed over my first build and made it so weak lol. Just reading the instruction manual in wonder over all the adventures to come is a beautiful memory.❤
I'd sincerely like one or more creators who have gone through those experiences to do video essays about whether their struggles ever extend into games, like if some folks deliberately maintain skooma-sober characters, or if someone who has gambling addictions avoids mini-games that are about gambling, or if they go the opposite way, feel they can do anything in games bc it's a contained setting. I know enough folks who've struggled with disordered + addictive behaviours to get that not every gamer would do the same, but I'd be so curious to hear a variety of experiences relayed, in whatever games the creators would want to discuss. EDIT: I forgot to say congratulations bc I was thinking so much about your comment in general, but I def meant to virtually fist bump you.✊
The game has a lot of issues, most of them aren't exactly contentious. The progression was just such a huge oversight that it did hurt the game quite a lot. Someone who did put a lot of effort in his roleplaying and build crafting while ignoring the mechanics might just have had some of the worst build possible with really frustrating gameplay later on. I do remember other issues, though it has been over 10 years: - Bugs, bugs, bugs. Some might have been funny yes, but most weren't. - Immersion: some random enemy wearing a full Deadric or glass armour ? really... crabs or wolves dropping stuff they shouldn't... - Some of the writing and buggy interactions made Oblivion a classic. Game had though also pretty bad writing. - Animations were and are bad. - Facial animations are bad. - Character creator is even for back then really bad. Though rather funny how could make some horrendous looking 'things'. And some points that might be just me: - Interface was annoying (though i don't exactly remember why). - I didn't like the Oblivion portals (same, i don't remember why). - Loading time was a mess back then (especially on console). - I didn't like the fact that the quest weapons you get scale to the level you got at that moment (we might put that one in the progression issue bulletpoint..) ---- Of course this list isn't exhaustiv, some of the things I remember. If had to put a positive list it would be quite longer though.
@@EJDubbz Because reviewers usually review games on their own merit, if a modder fixed some issues, the game itself still came out with those issues. Also most people don't use mods and don't even know how to mod.
Thank you for sharing your experiences with us. Knowing how important games like this and Diablo 2 were to you when growing up is what makes this channel’s updates something I look forward to, even when you are going over a game I have no interest in. I hope you have a fun time with your son for his birthday!
I remember finishing the battle at Kvatch and thinking this was the greatest game ever developed. Still a wonderful experience, glad you went back to it 💙
You should be proud for creating a life for yourself that you were not granted for any reasons and I am sure your son has an amazing father. Its weird how video games can affect us, I am sure many of us have similar memories attached to certain games.
This game will always have a front row seat in my heart. I always remember the random events I ran across over the past decade playing this. While traveling on my horse I ran across the dead body of Countess Alessia Caro on the ground. I even have a picture of it cause I thought it was really funny. There was one time in Chorrol I decided I was gonna kill one of the townsfolk so I can start the Dark Brotherhood quest. With my first swing of my sword, the guy I decided to attack turned out to be a secret Mythic Dawn agent and he immediately nailed my ass to the ground as the rest of the town attempted to stop him. I love this fucking game and no one can convince me otherwise.
Fun fact: you can actually change the enchantment on a sigil stone in an oblivion gate! Make a save right before you pick up the stone and once you picked it up if it has an enchantment that you don’t want just reload the save and it’ll have a different enchantment. It’s randomly generated so there is a chance you get the same enchantment, just reload and do it again it’ll change 😄
Awesome review, I really enjoyed watching it. But more importantly, thanks Mortym for sharing your motivations for saying goodbye to Oblivion. In those closing remarks you demonstrated a level of emotional maturity I don't see that often. As a dad myself I couldn't help but crack a smile when you mentioned your son's 5th birthday :) because these are the best of times. I'm glad the worst of time are behind you. All the best. Cheers.
Loved this video. I played Oblivion during a formative time in my life and I too hold a great deal of nostalgia for it. It was a joy to revisit it here through your eyes and spend an hour amongst some janky, moon-faced old friends. No matter what challenges our past selves went through, it is because of their perseverance and heart that we are here today. And I'm glad you're here.
I appreciate your personal note at the end. I remember diving into this game around the time I was dropping out of college. I ended up becoming a fantastic man wife, so mission accomplished. I'm raising three kids now, and they'll never know what it feels like to not have the support of their parents.
Love this. The shivering isles was also the highlight of oblivion for me. Being able to have fun & laugh in the midst of uncertainty & insanity is a big win. Thank you for sharing 😁
I can relate a lot to delving into Oblivion for hundreds (hell, thousands here) of hours because of wanting to escape reality back when it came out. I wasn’t homeless like you were but I was bullied very heavily and it was a solace from having to deal with that. Thanks for the video. I’m glad it helped you to make it.
I applaud you for taking the time to be vulnerable and talk about your personal experiences and why this game matters so much to you, I'm so happy things got better for you and your story is really beautiful Mortym. Wishing happiness and health for both you and your family!
Just listening to this as I work in my own personal projects. I think even though very different many of us can relate to your feels on this game. But either way thanks for sharing. This is probably my favorite video of yours and I believe that’s saying a lot since it was your amazing in depth videos on WotR that I first found your channel and came to know of and love that game.
Been watching and listening to your videos for awhile now. Literally playing Pathfinder WOTR right now and listening to some of your videos as my Lich does her thing. Just wanted to say I absolutely appreciate your work, your passion and your overall way of expressing different themes, mechanics, personal thoughts and such for games. The last bit of this video really hit home, and I'm really happy you're in a better physical and mental place. Hope your son had a great birthday!
Oblivion hold a special place in my heart as well. Different circumstances for me but it was something I can't separate from that time period. Thanks for the review. Fantastic as always.
Wow~ Mmm, thank you for sharing your personal note at the end and I am sorry that you experienced being homeless and I would think much turmoil/hurt from those years. I hope you can or have healed from those experiences, sincerely.
These reviews are getting more and more professional in tone, detail, covering every aspect. More thorough, so to speak. Keep it up, I'd like to see more retrospective reviews besides the new titles as well! :)
I watched this video in shorts bursts throughout the week. Really well done and the end hit like a truck. It came out of nowhere, I am a recent viewer of the channel, and I am glad you are in a better place and got the opportunity to close a very difficult chapter. Very touching video.
Thanks for sharing your insights about oblivion. I struggled with it and always seemed to end up hating it towards the high teens-low twenties levels and eventually just gave up on it despite many people around me saying they loved it. You made it make sense. It’s always a challenge to know how much to share with people in the internet, but I think you nailed it. Games were a way for me to escape and rebel against, what I now realize was an awful home life. It sounds like you found your way back a little faster than I did as being in my early 40’s I’m finally finding the time to really enjoy games again. Your commentary and analysis are perfect and have helped me find my way to some pretty fulfilling games that help me escape the pressures of life, albeit in a much healthier living situation. Thanks, Mortim!
That last part of your review talking about Oblivion's impact on your life was really beautiful. A couple of years back, I played through BOTW during what was really the worst part of my life by far and it really helped me through a lot of rough shit that almost broke me. Never touched TOTK, since it came out right around the time I was going through some bad relationship stuff that I didn't want dragging down my first experience with the sequel to one of my favorite games of all time. But I think you've inspired me to finally pick it up again. Thanks for sharing
I related to saying goodbye to something like this man! I am bit older for me those games are streets of rage and final fantasy 7. They are special they where my company for long time through rough teen years. Glad your doing well.
That was an excellent review, and you ended it on such a touching note! I really appreciate you being so open sometimes. A couple things that I think deserved a bit more attention in the video: 1) the incredible soundtrack by Jeremy Soule. Personally, I think it's a genuine masterpiece, and a huge part of the game's charm. I know you don't usually focus on stuff like that, but imo if any game ost deserves a special shoutout, it's this one. 2) Just how moddable the game is, and the incredible work the modding community has done over the years. A vanilla playthrough is alaays fun, but at the very least it's good to let people know about all the unofficial patches and the like, which you did mention, but only in passing.
Shivering Isles is about the only part of Oblivion I've replayed many times, because, like you, it feels like the most in sync with all the weirdness with excellent quests main and side content. Video games were also a big escape for my difficult childhood as well. It was a way safer space than my reality by far. I totally understand the feel of associating a time with the game you played at that time.
The personal note at the end is NOT silly. In different ways, speaking only for myself, I completely understand on a personal level. Also, one of the most rewarding parts of me being a father is seeing how things can be better. You made it, man.
Excellent video. I've seen this game get a lot of hate in recent years, which, in my opinion, is largely unfounded. I can recognize its shortcomings, most if not all of which were outlined in this video. Regardless, it is still a wonderful experience that I think many people should get to have. Skyrim brought me into this series. Now I play Morrowind the most and Oblivion second most. Thank you for taking the time and sharing your insights.
hearing your honest & passionate opinions about games old & new and your connection to them is really refreshing to see when so many other reviewers just play the newest game that comes out and rush a review out the door; it just doesn't capture the way games can make someone feel, and i got very emotional when listening to your personal note at the end. i'm super happy that you've been able to build such a fulfilling life & career for yourself. appreciate you and love the content you put out, mortym
THE game that shaped my childhood and love for videogames, I think I might just say hello to this old friend as well.. thanks for the great review, happy to hear how well your life has turned out now
It is so crazy to hear how much Oblivion meant to you. As it was also the same for me after i lost my uncle, who was like my older brother. I was in the infancy of my addiction to substances and was 18. Something about the UI and the world just drew me in like NO OTHER. I lost hundreds and hundreds of hours in this game. I even figured out that wierd communication game. Skyrim's UI was way too "modern" and going out of first person when riding the horse totally took me out of the immersion. Something was missing that i just couldnt put my finger on. This was my first and seemingly only game that I felt fully immersed. Nothing has ever given me the same feeling since and i miss that feeling!
You know, I've finally worked out why I enjoy your reviews so much. You love games man. You just love them. It's so clear and obvious and it's why your channel feels so honest when so many others just feel like corporate crap. I really respect that. Keep doing what you love my man
I remember the time leading up to the release of Oblivion and seeing photos in GamePro magazine and thinking how incredibly gorgeous the graphics were going to be.
Man. I loved Morrowind to death, and absolutely hated what they had done with Oblivion. But that salute at the end, that made me remember why we play games sometimes. Big hugs to you and your son.
This game gave me a treasured memory that is indelibly burned into my brain: During one of the fighter's guild quests, you accompany your quest giver into a ruin to investigate something. In the ruin, you find nothing but vermin, which is weird, and once you clear the dungeon the quest giver tells you to meet him back in town and the quest ends. Well, I triggered this dialog in a big room on the far side of a trap where the floor rises up and smashes you into ceiling spikes. I had avoided it earlier, and after the quest ended, I watched the quest giver pathfind straight across the trap and get smashed up against the ceiling. He got knocked unconscious, but the trap just kept cycling over and over again. It took him several minutes to get through it. That cracked me up so bad I actually had to put the game aside for a whole week because every time I'd fire it up, I'd just start laughing all over again. Oblivion is a beautiful, glorious, ridiculous mess, and it will always be one of my favorite games.
Old gamer here (52), and the only game I have more hours in is Diablo 2. There is something about Oblivion that just puts me into a cathartic state. I even love the bugs and quirks. 🤷🏻♂️ Thanks for the review and all of the recent BG3 stuff!
Oblivion was my first BGS game, RPG, and Elder Scrolls game. This game was like no other I ever played up to this point--the freedom, the ability to touch every object in the world, the NPCs that had their own schedules, the living world that felt like it continued on even when I wasn't playing--it was incredible. It ignited a love for these games that grew to me playing and loving Fallout and Starfield alongside the Elder Scrolls franchise. I'm going to be doing another full Oblivion GOTY playthrough once I finish up my current playthrough of Starfield.
You made me cry. I know the feeling, and I'm happy for you. A beautiful goodbye. Maybe after Skyrim you'll find the time for Enderal. I think you'll like it.
Was not expecting all the feels at the end 😢 You survived those struggles, and have the opportunity to give your kid the love and support you never had, and you should feel proud.
Thank you for.. 😢 I'd forgotten how much this game meant for me a certain time in my life.. A wonderful review happy to know I'm not alone in my fondness for this Lovely mess of a Masterpiece..
Games were my escape as well as a kid. I have a very strong emotional attachment to Pokemon Crystal version because I could hide in a closet or outside and play it for hours and hours and just forget all the bad things going on, how hungry or scared I was. You don't really think about what those games did because you don't really realize it until much, much later in life when those games are no longer around. Then you have moments like these when you kinda get a bit choked up thinking about how happy something so benign made you during a time where there just wasn't happiness anywhere else. No kid should grow up like that, we didn't deserve it. I'm glad you made it out of there, brother. Let's be the people our younger selves needed. Here is to games, what they can mean, and to a much better life with the people we love!
Shivering isles is a gaming expérience. Not as alien and immersive as morrowind and with less liberty but still a nice game. Skyblivion mod project is worth the attention.
Thanks for the great review. I also had a very tough time at a similar point in my life, though for different reasons. Final Fantasy 7 on the original Playstation was the game that helped me, and it's so nice to hear how Oblivion helped you. Great to hear how things are on the up and up for you, and keep up the great work with the channel
You caught me off guard with the ending of this video, throat got a little locked up there, because I am probably your age if not older and I have a lot of memories with this game as well. Your final good bye was awsome.
This game is equal parts masterpiece and equal parts insane fever dream.
I like to imagine that it's so insane and wierd because that's how this bizarre tiny world of tamriel actually is. In a wierd way it makes sense.
@@milosstojanovic4623 What's up dude?
Exactly why I love it so much
It’s funny when people think Oblivion is an old game. It’s came out in 2006 not 1986 😂
@@thewise3551 Mate people born in the 2000s are in their 20s now
The personal note at the end was very touching. I’m glad you at least had a game you loved to give you an escape and some joy in difficult times. Wish you all the best in the future!
I came here to say exactly this, but you did it for me. Hope is so good.
Same here actually. So glad that life is so much better now. Again, my 'go to' reviewer!
All so true, it's actually helping me right now through a difficult time, i decided to pick up the game again after a long time and all the good old memories of getting cracked out on skooma and punching everything to death came back, thanks Todd.
Absolutely. Same for me to be fair. I managed to get this game from a friend of mine that kinda out of pity decided to sell it to me for all the money i had, like 5 euros or something. I think i have never played a game so much as i did with oblivion. It was my only escape from a very miserable existance.
I didn't solve my situation as mortismal did. I am financially stable but no friends or family, but nontheless i am very happy for him, and it is nice to leave a chapter of our life "officially behind" :D
@@Krakkokayne hope it's getting better for you!
The last bit about your relationship with Oblivion was very inspiring although I knew of it from watching your past videos. You are in a way Hero of Kvatch: starting out in rough situation and ending gloriously as a champion.
Man, we all remember the day we emerged from those tutorial sewers. Genuinely been chasing that same high ever since - no game has even come close to giving me that same sensation.
Exiting Elden Ring tutorial area and entering Lands Between gave me similar vibes.
@@MegaBezveze It did - not as deep as Oblivion, being a jaded 35 year old, but it was dam close
I think exiting the shrine of resurrection at the start of Breath of the Wild got close, but you're right - that first time in Oblivion just had a magic that we'll never get back.
For me, it was Morrowind that gave me the feeling. But regardless of the game, im glad we all got to experience the feeling one way or another.
My man! How I miss those feels! I was just in awe when I exited the sewers!
Thanks for sharing that personal part of your life with us at the end. Playing video games to "escape" or find some sort of joy in an otherwise tumultuous part of life resonates very strongly with me personally, and I think it hits home with a lot of your viewers as well. Glad to hear that you were able to officially say "goodbye" to that part of your life!
I think I spent well over 200 hrs in the first year this came out. I remember being in year 12 (Final year of high school in Aus) and someone talking about the game. I used the library 'Study Period' time I had to research the game and wagged the rest of of the day (I think this was a Thursday as I wagged Friday too). Put the game in at 1pm - then it was all of a sudden it was 12am. A few years later, a friend was playing through it for the first time and I watched him play for about 50 hours. Game has attached itself to my soul along with STALKER and Fallout NV.
I also just remembered when I did the Dark Brotherhood and got to the cleanse mission. I refused to do it for about 2 weeks because I was so attached to the group. Sad really as retrospectively Emil's writing isn't great and it made no sense, but even now thinking about the Brotherhood, the ambient music that emphasised cold wet stone - leaves me looking at steam with the mouse hovering over the install button.
Bro your game taste is supreme! I love Fallout (especially 2), STALKER and Elder Scrolls LOL
200 hours in a year...Rookie numbers
Wagged?
@@MoonFanatic its Australian slang for skipping class
My favorite thing about Oblivion is that the magic isn't tied to "hands". I loved using a greatsword and casting at the same time
Ive seen people say this but with Skyrims favorite system that just lets you swap on the fly anyway it never really bothered me + the dual cast in Skyrim is awesome even if the spells on launch sucked
I think the spell system in Skyrim greatly expanded the diversity and just visual flair of using them.
I agree having a button to cast a spell with both hands occupied is great, but the appearance of wielding a spell and sword, like a proper spellsword, just feels so badass.
The only thing that really sucks is the lack of proper balancing and many spells being samey/copied and many having been removed like touch spells.
@@Verchiel_ Totally agree
@@MortismalGaming I actually preferred hotkeys and a radial over the favorites menu. It pausing the game and having to scroll through a list was a huge headache. I ended up modding back in the radial and hotkeys into skyrim.
@@dylanhendley5003 You can hotkey stuff from the favourites menu. But I'm on PC (unmodded).
Was not ready for that surprising heartfelt and emotional bit and the end. That cut me pretty deep. Love your content brother, keep doing great things!
Man, those closing statements hit hard.. I'm glad you shared this, as this is something I did with a couple of old games I had played. And the fact that you skipped the "all that youtube jazz" part makes it even more powerful. That's what games are about, and you've driven the message home perfectly, thank you!
Man, I have cried a bit on that last part - even your voice cracked a bit. Very emotional. And happy for you, really!
We can easily say that we all got a little bit emotional with you at the end. Beautifuly done.
I still think it's landscapes are beautiful, like a painting.
Discovering this game as a 12 year old is an experience that I'll never forget. I was shocked that I could just roam around in such a big world after leaving the prison. It really brings all the nostalgia on me, also that ost while roaming around the forests... I was always happy while playing this game.
Thank you for sharing that personal note at the end Mortym, very poetic way to close that chapter of your life and it's a credit to your character that you've come through all that pain to do amazing things, both in general and on this channel.
I was also wondering, do you think you'll play the latest expansion for Underrail? It has a continuation from the original main game ending.
Thank you! Are you referring to Infusion? I plan on covering it when its released if so. No plans for the small Heavy Duty DLC they dropped
Fantastic review and loved that touching end segment.
That's the double-edged sword with games as escapism. They take you to these fantastical alternate realities in the moment, but also take you back to those bad memories and headspaces when you replay them later. The role reverses, basically.
That's my struggle with Dark Souls, so I replay it every year to try to form new positive memories to associate with it because I love the game itself so much.
So glad to see you doing these TES retrospectives! Oblivion was truly a formative game for me. I got it when was a teenager and around the time my family got internet for the first time really. I remember that it was the first game I played to 100% and I was obsessed with it. I spent my free time on the UESP wiki updating information and guides as well as on the Gamespot forums in an Oblivion fan group called Lords And Ladies of Oblivion lol.
It's also the game that set me on my IT career path funny enough. I built my first PC to play Oblivion with money I made cutting grass and shoveling driveways. I got super into modding the game and back then there were not fancy mod managers you had to do everything manually. It forced me to learn a ton about how computer hardware and software worked and while it sounds funny now I literally had to troubleshoot my PC on a regular basis to get the game running. I built my analytical skills by trying to get Oblivion working! It's amazing how things work.
Just want to say that your final comments at the end of the video really moved me, and reminded me of my own past. While never homeless, I grew up with a lot of painful moments-divorces, my father’s alcoholism and eventual suicide, etc. It has always been games that were my escape, my rock. I have games I can remember playing at really rough times to distract me and help me cope. Today I am married with two beautiful kids, in a completely different place. I often revisit these old games to put a more positive memory on a great game, and to acknowledge how far I have come. I hear you. I feel you. I wish you all the best. We got this.
The art style of the classes and signs etc is so good. I can never get over how much I enjoy that style. Really goes well with the game
I almost cried at that last bit. Thanks for sharing that. It sounds like I didn't have it quite as tough as you did, but I did grow up in an abusive household. I played videogames to escape that. I didn't really have one game to latch onto like you did, although if I had to choose it would be a tie between Civ 5 and COD WAW, specifically the zombies mode. Its awesome to see just how much video games can mean to people. I'm happy you're doing much better now, and happy early birthday to your son. Sounds like he has an awesome dad :)
Okay my favorite random npc dialogue was after I went to sleep in an inn after killing the Grey Prince in the Arena I got a visit by Lucian Lachance after he tasked me to a kill a man and walks out of my room an npc approaches him while invisible and told him "Thry say if you kill someone the Dark Brotherhood comes to you in your sleep."
A beautiful sentiment at the end. Happy you found catharsis and closure!
Oblivion is what really got me into gaming, which years later is still my main hobby! Gaming really helped me through a lot of difficult times in my life. Without it I don’t know where I’d be today, so it is really amazing to see an in depth retrospective from someone who was also impacted greatly by the game as a teen.
I think the fact that there are still so many discussions and video about Oblivion after 18 years from it's release really says about how special the game is. There are really somethings you can never get in other games.
Most excited I've ever been for one of your reviews. Thanks for covering this. I said it previously, but Oblivion is among my favourite games of all time and probably THE game of my childhood along with Ocarina of Time. I'm literally flipping my Imperial Septim from my Oblivion Collectors Edition as I watch. Praise be Akatosh and all the Divines, wander with wisdom etc.
I really appreciate the touching ending. Personal chapters don't need to mean much to anyone other than the person who experienced it, but sometimes something doesn't need to be for other people. Even if they do get something out of it too.
The ending of the video alone deserves a double like 🎉. Great stuff
Man, I've watched your videos for a while now, so I'm well aware of your tough childhood, but it always sounds almost unreal to hear it again. I'm happy that nowadays, you can make a living doing what you love and I sincerely hope that you'll continue to be as successful with it as you currently are, if not more - you've definitely deserved it.
Hearing your voice crack a bit in the end had me tearing up. Nothing but love brother. We are beyond fortunate to have you here with us. Thank you.
I totally understand. Skyrim has a special place in my heart. I played it modded all through undergrad and grad school. It brought me through a lot of tough times. Great video and great channel!
That note at the end hit home for me. I was only a few years younger than you when I got oblivion the first time, I remember I managed to get a special edition with a coin in it, still have the coin somewhere. Oblivion made me fall in love with RPGs, a love I still have till this day. Fallout 3 was also a huge part of my life in high school as well. I totally understand feeling like these games are friends man. I'm glad you're life's gotten better, your content has helped me with builds, research and much more.
thanks for the work you do an for sharing your story so openly!
Thank you for sharing the personal moments from your life. It was really touching and heartfelt. I love your channel and your videos man. This is one of my favorites and provided a great escape as well!
Hey, just want say I really enjoy your thorough reviews, they're extremely well written, voiced, and edited. There are so many massive RPGs that I don't have the time to properly play through, so being able to watch your reviews helps give a lot of insight into these games or can even help me figure out which ones I would like to spend the time playing myself.
I really like the personal perspective you included. This game was also a beacon during a very dark time in my childhood too, and it’s so inspiring to see how far you’ve come and how you made this journey through the game a kind of therapy for you. Awesome work as always and I’m happy to be a subscriber and have found your content!
More deep dive retrospectives, please! Incredibly touching note at the end. Thank you for it.
I bought a ps3 when I got clean from opiates back in the day to help occupy some of my time and have a new sober friend. Oblivion was the first game I got and played during that time and I loved it so much even though I screwed over my first build and made it so weak lol. Just reading the instruction manual in wonder over all the adventures to come is a beautiful memory.❤
I'd sincerely like one or more creators who have gone through those experiences to do video essays about whether their struggles ever extend into games, like if some folks deliberately maintain skooma-sober characters, or if someone who has gambling addictions avoids mini-games that are about gambling, or if they go the opposite way, feel they can do anything in games bc it's a contained setting. I know enough folks who've struggled with disordered + addictive behaviours to get that not every gamer would do the same, but I'd be so curious to hear a variety of experiences relayed, in whatever games the creators would want to discuss.
EDIT: I forgot to say congratulations bc I was thinking so much about your comment in general, but I def meant to virtually fist bump you.✊
The only bad part is the progression. Leveling effectively was a pain.
The game has a lot of issues, most of them aren't exactly contentious. The progression was just such a huge oversight that it did hurt the game quite a lot. Someone who did put a lot of effort in his roleplaying and build crafting while ignoring the mechanics might just have had some of the worst build possible with really frustrating gameplay later on.
I do remember other issues, though it has been over 10 years:
- Bugs, bugs, bugs. Some might have been funny yes, but most weren't.
- Immersion: some random enemy wearing a full Deadric or glass armour ? really... crabs or wolves dropping stuff they shouldn't...
- Some of the writing and buggy interactions made Oblivion a classic. Game had though also pretty bad writing.
- Animations were and are bad.
- Facial animations are bad.
- Character creator is even for back then really bad. Though rather funny how could make some horrendous looking 'things'.
And some points that might be just me:
- Interface was annoying (though i don't exactly remember why).
- I didn't like the Oblivion portals (same, i don't remember why).
- Loading time was a mess back then (especially on console).
- I didn't like the fact that the quest weapons you get scale to the level you got at that moment (we might put that one in the progression issue bulletpoint..)
----
Of course this list isn't exhaustiv, some of the things I remember. If had to put a positive list it would be quite longer though.
At least it was better then Morrowind system
You can fix all these issues with mods. I hate that reviews never explain that or what mods to use.
@@EJDubbz Because reviewers usually review games on their own merit, if a modder fixed some issues, the game itself still came out with those issues. Also most people don't use mods and don't even know how to mod.
@@EJDubbz That a different conversation. But yes, the community does sometimes wonders for some of those titles.
Thank you for sharing your experiences with us. Knowing how important games like this and Diablo 2 were to you when growing up is what makes this channel’s updates something I look forward to, even when you are going over a game I have no interest in. I hope you have a fun time with your son for his birthday!
I remember finishing the battle at Kvatch and thinking this was the greatest game ever developed. Still a wonderful experience, glad you went back to it 💙
You should be proud for creating a life for yourself that you were not granted for any reasons and I am sure your son has an amazing father. Its weird how video games can affect us, I am sure many of us have similar memories attached to certain games.
This game will always have a front row seat in my heart. I always remember the random events I ran across over the past decade playing this. While traveling on my horse I ran across the dead body of Countess Alessia Caro on the ground. I even have a picture of it cause I thought it was really funny.
There was one time in Chorrol I decided I was gonna kill one of the townsfolk so I can start the Dark Brotherhood quest. With my first swing of my sword, the guy I decided to attack turned out to be a secret Mythic Dawn agent and he immediately nailed my ass to the ground as the rest of the town attempted to stop him.
I love this fucking game and no one can convince me otherwise.
Fun fact: you can actually change the enchantment on a sigil stone in an oblivion gate!
Make a save right before you pick up the stone and once you picked it up if it has an enchantment that you don’t want just reload the save and it’ll have a different enchantment. It’s randomly generated so there is a chance you get the same enchantment, just reload and do it again it’ll change 😄
Awesome review, I really enjoyed watching it. But more importantly, thanks Mortym for sharing your motivations for saying goodbye to Oblivion. In those closing remarks you demonstrated a level of emotional maturity I don't see that often.
As a dad myself I couldn't help but crack a smile when you mentioned your son's 5th birthday :) because these are the best of times. I'm glad the worst of time are behind you.
All the best. Cheers.
Loved this video. I played Oblivion during a formative time in my life and I too hold a great deal of nostalgia for it. It was a joy to revisit it here through your eyes and spend an hour amongst some janky, moon-faced old friends. No matter what challenges our past selves went through, it is because of their perseverance and heart that we are here today. And I'm glad you're here.
I appreciate your personal note at the end. I remember diving into this game around the time I was dropping out of college. I ended up becoming a fantastic man wife, so mission accomplished. I'm raising three kids now, and they'll never know what it feels like to not have the support of their parents.
Your appreciation of life really inspires me. Thank you for sharing that ending.
Love this. The shivering isles was also the highlight of oblivion for me. Being able to have fun & laugh in the midst of uncertainty & insanity is a big win. Thank you for sharing 😁
Thank you for opening up at the end, it was very touching.
I can relate a lot to delving into Oblivion for hundreds (hell, thousands here) of hours because of wanting to escape reality back when it came out. I wasn’t homeless like you were but I was bullied very heavily and it was a solace from having to deal with that.
Thanks for the video. I’m glad it helped you to make it.
Seems like we went through alot of the same stuff man, glad to see you made it out the other end. This game holds the same place in my life too
I applaud you for taking the time to be vulnerable and talk about your personal experiences and why this game matters so much to you, I'm so happy things got better for you and your story is really beautiful Mortym. Wishing happiness and health for both you and your family!
Just listening to this as I work in my own personal projects. I think even though very different many of us can relate to your feels on this game. But either way thanks for sharing. This is probably my favorite video of yours and I believe that’s saying a lot since it was your amazing in depth videos on WotR that I first found your channel and came to know of and love that game.
Been watching and listening to your videos for awhile now. Literally playing Pathfinder WOTR right now and listening to some of your videos as my Lich does her thing. Just wanted to say I absolutely appreciate your work, your passion and your overall way of expressing different themes, mechanics, personal thoughts and such for games. The last bit of this video really hit home, and I'm really happy you're in a better physical and mental place. Hope your son had a great birthday!
Oblivion hold a special place in my heart as well. Different circumstances for me but it was something I can't separate from that time period.
Thanks for the review. Fantastic as always.
Wow~ Mmm, thank you for sharing your personal note at the end and I am sorry that you experienced being homeless and I would think much turmoil/hurt from those years. I hope you can or have healed from those experiences, sincerely.
These reviews are getting more and more professional in tone, detail, covering every aspect. More thorough, so to speak.
Keep it up, I'd like to see more retrospective reviews besides the new titles as well! :)
I watched this video in shorts bursts throughout the week. Really well done and the end hit like a truck. It came out of nowhere, I am a recent viewer of the channel, and I am glad you are in a better place and got the opportunity to close a very difficult chapter. Very touching video.
Thanks for sharing your insights about oblivion. I struggled with it and always seemed to end up hating it towards the high teens-low twenties levels and eventually just gave up on it despite many people around me saying they loved it. You made it make sense.
It’s always a challenge to know how much to share with people in the internet, but I think you nailed it. Games were a way for me to escape and rebel against, what I now realize was an awful home life. It sounds like you found your way back a little faster than I did as being in my early 40’s I’m finally finding the time to really enjoy games again. Your commentary and analysis are perfect and have helped me find my way to some pretty fulfilling games that help me escape the pressures of life, albeit in a much healthier living situation. Thanks, Mortim!
That last part of your review talking about Oblivion's impact on your life was really beautiful. A couple of years back, I played through BOTW during what was really the worst part of my life by far and it really helped me through a lot of rough shit that almost broke me. Never touched TOTK, since it came out right around the time I was going through some bad relationship stuff that I didn't want dragging down my first experience with the sequel to one of my favorite games of all time. But I think you've inspired me to finally pick it up again. Thanks for sharing
Damn bro that ending note really touched me. You’re on your way to become the goat of this style of game reviews imo.
I related to saying goodbye to something like this man! I am bit older for me those games are streets of rage and final fantasy 7. They are special they where my company for long time through rough teen years. Glad your doing well.
That was an excellent review, and you ended it on such a touching note! I really appreciate you being so open sometimes.
A couple things that I think deserved a bit more attention in the video:
1) the incredible soundtrack by Jeremy Soule. Personally, I think it's a genuine masterpiece, and a huge part of the game's charm. I know you don't usually focus on stuff like that, but imo if any game ost deserves a special shoutout, it's this one.
2) Just how moddable the game is, and the incredible work the modding community has done over the years. A vanilla playthrough is alaays fun, but at the very least it's good to let people know about all the unofficial patches and the like, which you did mention, but only in passing.
Thats a very nice way to end the video man. I took a lot for granted when i was younger. Glad to hear your happy
You should also add a video about the best mods for immersion
Shivering Isles is about the only part of Oblivion I've replayed many times, because, like you, it feels like the most in sync with all the weirdness with excellent quests main and side content.
Video games were also a big escape for my difficult childhood as well. It was a way safer space than my reality by far. I totally understand the feel of associating a time with the game you played at that time.
That ending. Glad your life is back on track. Well done ❤
The personal note at the end is NOT silly. In different ways, speaking only for myself, I completely understand on a personal level. Also, one of the most rewarding parts of me being a father is seeing how things can be better.
You made it, man.
A new year, a new hour+ long Oblivion retrospective. It’s beautiful
I made it 47 minutes into the video, but I couldn't resist any more, and booted up Oblivion. Phenomenal video, thank you
Excellent video. I've seen this game get a lot of hate in recent years, which, in my opinion, is largely unfounded. I can recognize its shortcomings, most if not all of which were outlined in this video. Regardless, it is still a wonderful experience that I think many people should get to have. Skyrim brought me into this series. Now I play Morrowind the most and Oblivion second most. Thank you for taking the time and sharing your insights.
hearing your honest & passionate opinions about games old & new and your connection to them is really refreshing to see when so many other reviewers just play the newest game that comes out and rush a review out the door; it just doesn't capture the way games can make someone feel, and i got very emotional when listening to your personal note at the end. i'm super happy that you've been able to build such a fulfilling life & career for yourself. appreciate you and love the content you put out, mortym
What a powerful ending. You’re a friend I haven’t met yet. On to bigger and better things and glad you were able to cut some anchors loose.
THE game that shaped my childhood and love for videogames, I think I might just say hello to this old friend as well.. thanks for the great review, happy to hear how well your life has turned out now
It is so crazy to hear how much Oblivion meant to you. As it was also the same for me after i lost my uncle, who was like my older brother. I was in the infancy of my addiction to substances and was 18. Something about the UI and the world just drew me in like NO OTHER. I lost hundreds and hundreds of hours in this game. I even figured out that wierd communication game. Skyrim's UI was way too "modern" and going out of first person when riding the horse totally took me out of the immersion. Something was missing that i just couldnt put my finger on. This was my first and seemingly only game that I felt fully immersed. Nothing has ever given me the same feeling since and i miss that feeling!
Wow I just stumbled upon this video and did *not* come prepared for that outro. Massive kudos! I am inspired to do my own goodbye playthrough now.
You know, I've finally worked out why I enjoy your reviews so much.
You love games man. You just love them. It's so clear and obvious and it's why your channel feels so honest when so many others just feel like corporate crap.
I really respect that. Keep doing what you love my man
That was a lovely personal note at the end, thanks for sharing Mortym ❤
I remember the time leading up to the release of Oblivion and seeing photos in GamePro magazine and thinking how incredibly gorgeous the graphics were going to be.
Glarthir was one of my favourite and most memorable quests in any RPG.
Man. I loved Morrowind to death, and absolutely hated what they had done with Oblivion. But that salute at the end, that made me remember why we play games sometimes. Big hugs to you and your son.
Thank you for this video, your thoughts, the longform analysis, and your comments in the end.
Thanks for sharing your story, Mort.
It was very touching.
Glad life is going well for you now.
Keep up the good work
Man. I've heard you talk about your past in many previous videos but the story at the end here still hit me so hard. I'm glad you're doing well.
This game gave me a treasured memory that is indelibly burned into my brain:
During one of the fighter's guild quests, you accompany your quest giver into a ruin to investigate something. In the ruin, you find nothing but vermin, which is weird, and once you clear the dungeon the quest giver tells you to meet him back in town and the quest ends. Well, I triggered this dialog in a big room on the far side of a trap where the floor rises up and smashes you into ceiling spikes. I had avoided it earlier, and after the quest ended, I watched the quest giver pathfind straight across the trap and get smashed up against the ceiling. He got knocked unconscious, but the trap just kept cycling over and over again. It took him several minutes to get through it.
That cracked me up so bad I actually had to put the game aside for a whole week because every time I'd fire it up, I'd just start laughing all over again.
Oblivion is a beautiful, glorious, ridiculous mess, and it will always be one of my favorite games.
Old gamer here (52), and the only game I have more hours in is Diablo 2. There is something about Oblivion that just puts me into a cathartic state. I even love the bugs and quirks. 🤷🏻♂️ Thanks for the review and all of the recent BG3 stuff!
Oblivion was my first BGS game, RPG, and Elder Scrolls game. This game was like no other I ever played up to this point--the freedom, the ability to touch every object in the world, the NPCs that had their own schedules, the living world that felt like it continued on even when I wasn't playing--it was incredible. It ignited a love for these games that grew to me playing and loving Fallout and Starfield alongside the Elder Scrolls franchise. I'm going to be doing another full Oblivion GOTY playthrough once I finish up my current playthrough of Starfield.
You made me cry. I know the feeling, and I'm happy for you. A beautiful goodbye.
Maybe after Skyrim you'll find the time for Enderal. I think you'll like it.
Really enjoy your reviews, glad you are living life the way you want.
That little steam deck chapter is Just For Me and I'm very grateful
Was not expecting all the feels at the end 😢 You survived those struggles, and have the opportunity to give your kid the love and support you never had, and you should feel proud.
Thank you for.. 😢 I'd forgotten how much this game meant for me a certain time in my life.. A wonderful review happy to know I'm not alone in my fondness for this Lovely mess of a Masterpiece..
Just want to wish your son a happy birthday, and you and your family a blessed future. You deserve it brother, thanks for all the excellent work.
3:49 I feel personally attacked (I kid). Thanks for the video! Onward to 300k. All glory to the algorithm.
thank you for sharing your personal note, it was touching and admirable. cheers
Games were my escape as well as a kid. I have a very strong emotional attachment to Pokemon Crystal version because I could hide in a closet or outside and play it for hours and hours and just forget all the bad things going on, how hungry or scared I was. You don't really think about what those games did because you don't really realize it until much, much later in life when those games are no longer around. Then you have moments like these when you kinda get a bit choked up thinking about how happy something so benign made you during a time where there just wasn't happiness anywhere else. No kid should grow up like that, we didn't deserve it. I'm glad you made it out of there, brother. Let's be the people our younger selves needed. Here is to games, what they can mean, and to a much better life with the people we love!
Shivering isles is a gaming expérience.
Not as alien and immersive as morrowind and with less liberty but still a nice game.
Skyblivion mod project is worth the attention.
I'm really glad you've found a good place in your life, happy birthday to your little lad too!
Thanks for the great review. I also had a very tough time at a similar point in my life, though for different reasons. Final Fantasy 7 on the original Playstation was the game that helped me, and it's so nice to hear how Oblivion helped you. Great to hear how things are on the up and up for you, and keep up the great work with the channel
thank you for sharing the personal note at the end. It's great that you're in a better spot now. Every upload on this channel is a pleasure!
Whoa! I've dumped countless hours into Oblivion and never knew about the goblin war mechanic. You just blew my mind!
I played on ps3 and abandoned. But I just recently installed on PC and I'm excited on going through this review first to have the best time...
You caught me off guard with the ending of this video, throat got a little locked up there, because I am probably your age if not older and I have a lot of memories with this game as well. Your final good bye was awsome.