Ever since the game’s first trailer at Summer Games Fest, fans have been exploring every detail of Bethesda’s upcoming Starfield RPG, and now they think they’ve solved another mystery, namely how the game will handle Skyrim, Fallout, and Oblivion. Inspirational “coming out” moment.
Reddit user Exo_soldier started a thread immediately after the game’s first reveal, and then the entire community added their own additions, culminating in a video by YouTuber Taye Talks outlining how Starfield would apparently open up and how Bethesda would introduce its first glimpses of enormous space.
In the initial character creation menus, your Starfield character is by default described as being employed by Argos Extractors, supposedly a mining company operating on one of the game’s 1,000 planets. and a laser tool for extracting iron ore as proof of mining will be used as a backdrop.
Delving deeper (no pun intended) into this theory, Taye Talks and the Reddit community revealed another moment in gameplay footage where a companion, dressed in what appears to be a space miner suit, looks at the player character and makes comments. . “Most anthers don’t even go that far.” This is probably because the game starts deep below the surface of the planet: your fledgling miner character (the same comrade even calls you a “recruit”) has progressed further than most other recruits, but is now vital to time out, isolated underground. , far from any wide galactic sight and fully prepared to be stunned when they finally reach the surface. Oblivion throws you into an underground prison. Fallout generally places you in a nuclear bunker. A space mine would make sense, that’s all we say.
At some point during this initial section of mining, Reddit users suggest you wander away from your friends and come across a mysterious rock formation. It’s this interaction (you can see your character reach out and touch the whimsical floating rock in the in-game footage) that sets the Starfield story in motion. Back on the planet’s dusty surface, a pilot greets you and asks if you’ve had “any visions.”
Suddenly, one of Starfield’s enemy factions, the Crimson Fleet, attacks you and the other miners – this is where fans have speculated you’ll get the in-game combat training. The pilot dies, but after being told to visit the Constellation, a council of intellectuals that also acts as the Greybeards in Skyrim or the Brotherhood of Steel in Fallout, you immediately take control of their ship and travel the universe. That’s it, boom: as soon as you leave the atmosphere of this first planet, you have a departure moment.
It’s a detailed theory, based on selective evidence from gaming footage, and follows the model Bethesda has used in its RPGs thus far. We’re almost convinced, but we’ll have to wait until Starfield launches in 2023 to find out the truth.
Source : PC Gamesn
