Wednesday 29 April 2020

Playing Skyrim quest mods: Legacy of the Dragonborn

When I publish this it's been about a week since I last played. This stint in Skyrim has been really cool, but it's seemingly over now.

Legacy of the Dragonborn is the most extensive and detailed mod I have ever played. To begin with I got the mod because I really needed a place where I could show off all my loot and not just shuck it in a chest and never look at it again. Legacy of the Dragonborn comes with a museum to do just that.

But it becomes so much more. There are several quests related to the museum itself, but at one point you get to found an Explorers Guild which kicks off the best fanmade delve into Falmer history that I have ever seen.

The mod is fully voice-acted (really well to boot) and even affiliated with a bunch of other popular mods so you can show off your loot from those mods as well. A few of them are The Forgotten City, Moonpath to Elsweyr, The Cowl of Nocturnal, Moon and Star, Artifacts of Boethiah, Oblivion Artifacts, and many many more.

Every ruin (Nordic, Dwarven, Falmer) you go to will have archeology sites that will allow you to do an archeological dig and take fragments with you. Fragments that can later be combined into artifacts to put up on display. The more archeological digs you do the higher your archeology skill gets (complete skill tree with perk points!) and you get benefits from digging. I really liked the whole archeology thing

After I finished the questing of the mod it mostly became all about filling the museum and completing the displays. I confess that I got bored of artifact hunting about halfway through and that's the reason I stopped playing Skyrim this time around.

No comments:

Post a Comment

What's the first thought in your head after reading this? Let me know!