Is this British culture?
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Karen knows no nationality
The Elder Scrolls music really puts this over the top.
“it’ll be fine,” said the senior programmer working at Bethesda to code functional lanterns and light sources in The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind, “it’s not technically infinite but it is effectively infinite. no one could POSSIBLY play one single save file of this game for that long. it’s impossible. this will do.”
meanwhile, from my impossible sky castle in the sky, looking down into the past with my inverse telescope, i begin cackling wickedly at the programmer’s folly, their complete foolishness, as i return to my supercomputer with a fresh glass of non-alcoholic wine. year 31 of Endless Morrowind has begun.
Is this British culture?
Karen knows no nationality
The Elder Scrolls music really puts this over the top.
One of my favorite tidbits about Oblivion is that, when Bethesda brought Patrick Stewart in to play Uriel Septim, they gave him this big 90-page booklet detailing the character’s history and background and motivations, and they were really worried that they’d gone overboard and given him too much. Meanwhile, Stewart was delighted–he’s said that it was the best character prep he’d ever been given, and he wished more people would do that.
It’s worth noting that this character dies in the tutorial

Good news: Look at my character marker in the top middle! I found out that if you jump over a city wall in Oblivion the overworld still technically exists and has dimensions with buggy terrain physics but the invisible walls keeping you on the map don’t exist so you can go anywhere.
Bad News: I was caught by the Imperial patrol crossing the border into Skyrim and now they’re taking me to Helgen?
oblivion is an abysmal game and everyone should play it
Farewell!
The comedic timing in this is Oscar worthy








