Skyrim made me practice lock picking on my own house lock in

Post » Mon Jun 11, 2012 8:21 pm

seems legit.

If http://imgur.com/gallery/oFi96 could happen, anything is possible
Some people...
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des lynam
 
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Post » Tue Jun 12, 2012 1:38 am

Some people...

Who knew the Thane of Whiterun was a jerk?
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Dean
 
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Post » Mon Jun 11, 2012 2:41 pm

Lock picking was better in Fallout 3 / NV. You had much more 'feedback' when picking locks. In Skyrim your lockpicks will break far too easy.
Bobby pins are probably more bendy than skyrims ancient lock picks i suppose.
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James Wilson
 
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Post » Tue Jun 12, 2012 1:41 am

Who knew the Thane of Whiterun was a jerk?
I know, and poor Lydia have to follow him around.
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BethanyRhain
 
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Post » Mon Jun 11, 2012 5:05 pm

Well that was the funniest thread i could of read to start my day!
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Daramis McGee
 
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Post » Tue Jun 12, 2012 4:38 am

Being the thane of Whiterun doesnt help if youre in another state.
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Chris BEvan
 
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Post » Mon Jun 11, 2012 6:00 pm

Lockpicking can get you into some interesting places.
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Annick Charron
 
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Post » Mon Jun 11, 2012 6:46 pm

But, but...what if is Requires a Key? :rofl:
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Lily Something
 
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Post » Tue Jun 12, 2012 3:11 am

But, but...what if is Requires a Key? :rofl:
Then he'll have a problem, I don't know OPs age, but he could pickpocket his mom (or himself if he has moved out) and get the key.
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phillip crookes
 
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Post » Mon Jun 11, 2012 3:10 pm

I actually picked a lock on an office door one day. I was a hero for about 4 hours, then I was a nobody again.
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Charity Hughes
 
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Post » Tue Jun 12, 2012 3:40 am

I learnt a bit of lock picking IRL, haven't managed to pick a lock yet.
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Maeva
 
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Post » Mon Jun 11, 2012 11:44 pm

Well, as long as it doesn't get you pickpocketing in real life, then you're probably OK.
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Tarka
 
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Post » Mon Jun 11, 2012 10:12 pm

Where you able to pick the hardest of locks even with no experience?
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Nymph
 
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Post » Tue Jun 12, 2012 3:00 am

I learned to pick locks when I was 12. I got in trouble for something when I was a kid (I think it was related to school - this was decades ago)... and my father took my "Star Wars" collecting cards - as punishment - and locked them in his desk. The next day, after I got home from school (and after buying a few new packs of Star Wars cards), I got a couple of paper clips and started working on the lock to his desk (this was NOT an old desk, and had a modern lock... with 3 or 4 tumblers). I had it open in a minute or two, sorted through my collection, replaced just the cards that were in the desk, and put the rest of my (new) cards in my room (keeping the duplicate cards in a separate stack). Oh... and I also "re-locked" the desk, so my father wouldn't know I had been in there! I got my cards back in a week or two, anyway... but unlike kids today, we didn't have blu-rays, DVD's - or even VHS tapes back then, so the only images to be seen from the movie was on the cards (or in magazines, but there was less of those "specialty" movie magazines back then, and not a lot of scenes from the movie, as compared to the cards).

Today, I can still pick advanced locks, using just a small screwdriver and a paper clip or two. I even picked a deadbolt lock (which is actually the same exact tumbler as an entry lock). I'm sure those "specialty lock-picks" and "power" lock-picking tools are better, and possibly faster... but I picked that deadbolt lock in under a minute. Having an understanding of how the locking mechanisms work is "key" to being able to pick a lock (and perhaps some luck).

I don't think Skyrim is realistic in terms of lockpicking. It was better in Oblivion (realistic, at least... if you did NOT use the auto-attempt). If you are a beginning/low-level player, working on the hardest/master locks... then the following is true: With Skyrim, it's just a matter of time to find the right spot - AND having enough lockpicks; With Oblivion, EVERY mistake resulted in tumblers falling and having to re-set each of those fallen tumblers (if you were "manually" picking the lock)! Guess what? Picking locks in real-life is EXACTLY like that!! I don't remember how many times I had to pick the locks on jail cells in Oblivion (either to escape or help another character escape), but if you were locked-up... you ONLY had ONE pick, and it was all I ever needed.

Oh... and I've never picked locks in real-life to get into places I wasn't supposed to be in (except my father's desk, when I was a kid)! :angel:
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Emma Pennington
 
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Post » Tue Jun 12, 2012 12:04 am

True story, I start acting like I'm some skyrim person (cause im just forever alone like that) cause it's fun some times.
Mainstream Facebook cancer of meme and rageface ruining alert.
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Charlotte Henderson
 
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Post » Mon Jun 11, 2012 7:24 pm

Dragon slayer, your post is hurting my eyes.
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Zosia Cetnar
 
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