I happen to know that the next DLC will be Bethesda's version of Nintendogs. You will raise a Skeever, taking special care to look after his needs. You need to feed him, keep him warm, give him exercise, and love. Bethesda has shifted their focus from making content driven RPGs to gimmicky sims games. I got this from an inside source who eats from Bethesda's garbage bins.
Building a house = enhancing immersion = enhancing the ROLE YOU ARE PLAYING. Just because Hearthfire isn't hack and slash through a dungeon to find some relic like every single quest in Skyrim, doesn't mean it isn't content for an RPG.
Building a house = enhancing immersion = enhancing the ROLE YOU ARE PLAYING. Just because Hearthfire isn't hack and slash through a dungeon to find some relic like every single quest in Skyrim, doesn't mean it isn't content for an RPG.
By that logic, EVERYTHING is a role playing game. When I play Mario Bros. I am playing a role. When I eat a mushroom, it enhances the role I am playing. RPGs are more than that. It refers to a specific genre of gaming.
Building a house = enhancing immersion = enhancing the ROLE YOU ARE PLAYING. Just because Hearthfire isn't hack and slash through a dungeon to find some relic like every single quest in Skyrim, doesn't mean it isn't content for an RPG.
Except that if Skyrim was REALLY an RPG that would have been in the game from the get-go.
And you must carry that Skeever up the mountain everyday and have him drink from the waters while singing to him. He will grow fatter and fatter each day, and you will become stronger. Only then will you be able to become Dragonborn.