- The senior game designer for the original The biggest scrolls 4: oblivion It is impressed by the Reaster of Bethesda and the virtuous
- Bruce Nesmith thought that the game was going to be a texture update and does not believe that calling him a “remaster” does not do justice
- Nesmith would classify the game as “Oblivion 2.0”
Bruce Nesmith, the senior game designer for the original The biggest scrolls 4: oblivion, He has shared his thoughts about the new Remaster of Bethesda and Virtuos and does not believe that the term “really does justice.”
In a recent interview with Videogamer, Nesmith said that he spent years working in the original game and that “a lot of blood, sweat and tears came into that”, but revealed that he had not heard of the Remaster until the game leaked himself online before his official announcement.
“I knew intimately every scene they were showing. And they looked incredible,” he said.
The game has been rebuilt in Unreal Engine 5 and has completely new models of characters, a new lighting system, improvements in the environment and a back of the game mechanics.
The improvements are so significant that Nesmith does not believe that calling Remaster is doing justice to the game.
“He supposed this would be an texture update,” he explained. “I really didn’t think it was going to be the complete review they announced that it is … I wouldn’t have hit that.
“But to completely redo the animations, the animation system, place in the unreal engine, change the leveling system, change the user interface. I mean, that is, you are touching each part of the game. That is an amazing amount of remastering. It almost need its own word, frankly. I am not sure that it really exceeds justice.”
Bethesda Shadow fell The elderly scrolls 4: remastered oblivion The day it was revealed, and the game quickly obtained more than 190,000 concurrent players in Steam.
Seeing the reception of the 2006 Reaster, Nesmith said that the number one he feels is “pride.”
“A game in which I worked has the longevity of generating interest 20 years later and worthwhile, it sounds like a considerable effort, and the time Bethesda put it to remastely,” he said.
Since Nesmith thinks that the term “remaster” does not do justice to the game, think “the closest thing that could come [to categorizing it] It is forgotten 2.0 “.
The elderly scrolls 4: remastered oblivion It is now available on PC, PS5, Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S and Xbox Game Pass for $ 49.99 / £ 49.99 and $ 59.99 / £ 59.99 for the luxury edition.