They release a DLC that allows you to build your house, have a pet, even an adopt a kid. But they still dont improve the part in the game which is probably the best chance at giving the 'Mighty Dragonborn' a humane side. I mean, after completing five-six quests in dark dungeons and misty, snowy mountains fighting undeads and bandits, I ride my horse from wherever to my green-grassed blue-skyed cheerful Whiterun over the beautiful fields of Tundra among neighbor giants and beautiful rivers, galloping, feeling like Gandalf returning to Shire every once in a while after long journeys in darker parts of middle earth, I enter the beautiful town and greet everyone and walk to my house to see my daughter, at which point our only conversation is she asking for septims. I know Bethesda loves realism but SHE IS NOT A TEENAGER.
But after all, the concept of emotion is pretty weak in the game anyway. The cheers or sorrows seem so mechanic. I would like to see when I enter an inn, people dancing and singing together not just some weak ass bard singing the same song like a 1 hour show in a poor bar where every customer comes to drink to forget their day. Theres this one guy hanging outside the Belethor's General Goods saying something like 'You know whats missing in Skyrim these day? Jokes humor romance whatever' something like that I forgot it now.
Well is that guy Bethesda's excuse for the lack of more realistic emotions in the game?