If there’s one thing you can expect people playing Bethesda games to do, it’s hoard stuff. I’m the sort of player who picks up every resource I stumble upon, regardless of need — thank the stars ammo has no weight value. In The Elder Scrolls 5: Skyrim, it was potions, armor, and all sorts of food. In Starfield, I’ve taken to stealing pens and other writing tools off corporate office desks and science research stations, alongside the usual suspects like food and health items.
It’s a problem at the beginning of these games, when players lack storage for all this junk. And so it goes onto the floor of the spaceship, creating the sort of mess that’s become iconic in Bethesda games. Some players focus purely on collecting one item or another; cheese wheels and cabbage are both popular items to hoard in Skyrim. Sometimes they’re in one big ol’ pile — like the mess on my Starfield ship — or in a dark, aesthetic-minded basement where cheese wheels are artfully stacked or laid out across the floor. In Fallout 76, dovetailing with the start of the coronavirus pandemic, players hoarded toilet paper to neatly stack on display shelves.
The thing that makes Bethesda games so ripe for this kind of collecting is the sheer number of items that players can pick up. It feels like there are thousands of different item models used to fill out the games’ worlds. Starfield appears to have more than ever, and largely just for the ambiance they create; unlike in Fallout 4, you can’t break down items in Starfield for resources. There’s so much stuff — beautiful, beautiful stuff — that’s just there for the vibe. And to pick up. It makes for a distinctly Bethesda feel, absolutely looting a room for no reason other than to have things, then heading
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