Preface: Before I began playing Skyrim, I was really interested in the idea that there was a civil war going on, and in the role of the Thalmor amidst this conflict. I played through the civil war quest line and promptly thought, "that's it...?" To me, the civil war came quest-line took a golden premise and did almost nothing with it. The quest writing was almost non-existent, and the end result felt like radiant story gone wild. That being said, I thought the idea had tons of potential. Skyrim in chaos, the Thalmor on the doorstep, corruption, rebellion, and the chance for some really cool decisions.
I still haven't finished the main quest line, but so far the dragonborn schtick hasn't really impressed me in its conception. The whole idea of what it means to be "dragonborn" has little in the way of backstory, leading me to wish that Beth had made the civil war the MQ and come up with a really interesting, politically driven questline.
Questions (note that these are all in terms of quality of the game, not sales)
1. Do you think Beth made the right choice making dragons the central point of the main quest?
- explain with reference to gameplay/story ie "Yes, I think Beth was right to make dragons the centerfold because it really improves gameplay where the dragons really shine"
2. Were you happy with the Civil War?
-explain, with reference to the quest line itself, overall atmosphere, backstory, execution, etc
3. In general, do you prefer the storylines to be driven by "Fantasy" themes (ex dragons, Oblivion's Daedra), or more "Human" themes (ex Politics)?
-Note that answering "human" themes wouldn't endorse removing fantastical elements from the game, as it is obviously a "fantasy" game.
4. Lastly, would you prefer the main quest to make
a) You the the destined hero and saviour (ex Dragonborn)?
You a hero of your own making (not destined)?c) You are a supporting character in a larger plot (possibly Oblivion, but arguably not)?
I would like to know what the general forum consensus is (if there is one). This is obviously a fantasy game, so I could see the majority of people favouring the fantastical and the hero-driven. At the same time, we often hear complaints about depth, lack of choice, and the like. A story that is inherently political (leadership of Skyrim, defense/overthrow of the Empire, Thalmor conflict) could have the potential to satisfy those concerns. Did the dragonborn story satisfy you? Do you like the inclusion of shouts? Do you like their separation from the magic system? All comments appreciated.
