The thin line between grinding and natural progression

Post » Fri Nov 23, 2012 8:37 am

One of the things that I find troublesome in Skyrim is to level up the crafting skills. I never seem to strike the right balance between grinding and leveling them up in a natural way.

I try to use smithing when I naturally acquire the materials needed for it. For instance, when I kill a number of wolves or sabrecats, I bring their pelts to the city and turn them into leather, then I create leather items or improve existing items.

However, this is a very slow process and when I really need to use smithing in order to improve my weapons, for instance, I realize that I don't have the skill level necessary for doing it. That's when I tend to make use of the old smithing trick: buy lots of iron, create lots of iron daggers... and I get frustrated because the whole process seems unnatural to me.

The same goes for enchanting; when you start to enchant things, the items you enchant are pretty lame, so I end up resorting to cheap tactics like getting lots of clothes and enchanting them with puny effects just to level up the skill. And it always seems I'm abusing the system.

Does this bother you? Or is it just me?
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Joey Avelar
 
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Post » Fri Nov 23, 2012 7:14 am

Yeah I don't like grinding like that either. How could one improve one's smithing by grinding out a hundred simple items? So I'm with you there.

Why not pay for training instead of grinding? That makes perfect sense, you're being given a lesson from a master. It also gives you something to spend your money on.
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josie treuberg
 
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