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Starfield designer admits Bethesda's space epic isn't "the same caliber" as Fallout and Elder Scrolls because it's full of procedural generation: "The planets start to feel very samey"
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Ashley Bardhan
2025-10-21
It's impossible for anything – even a game by RPG god Bethesda – to completely live up to humongous expectations, and so 2023 space explorer Starfield isn't an outlier in that sense. But, compared to its siblings Fallout and Elder Scrolls, Starfield has only a mouse-sized portion of the same staying power. One of its designers thinks procedural generation is to blame. Game designer Bruce Nesmith, a Dungeons & Dragons icon with credits on video games like Oblivion, Skyrim, and Starfield, explains to FRVR in a new interview that Starfield's infamous thousands of planets might as well be empty. "When the planets start to feel very samey and you don’t start to feel the excitement on the planets," says Nesmith, "that's to me where it falls apart." I'm playing The Outer Worlds for the first time because my friend told me it was better than Fallout, and now I'm hyped for the sequel to push it even further Channeling big Fallout energy means The Outer Worlds 2 could be the Starfield I always wanted 2 years in, Bethesda answers player hopes and says it's improving Starfield space travel: "Part of the team has been focused on space gameplay to make the travels there more rewarding" There's also trouble with Starfield's vast, silver setting. Nesmith says, "a lot of the work I did on Starfield was on the astronomical data," but space is "inherently boring. It's literally described as nothingness. So moving throughout that isn't where the excitement is, in my opinion." This sense of inertia is why Nesmith "leans towards procedural generation" as the reason Starfield hasn't matched something like 2006 game Oblivion in becoming a definitive Bethesda RPG, but that doesn't make it unpopular, either. At the moment, Oblivion Remastered currently has, for its age, an impressive 1,500 concurrent players according to SteamDB, while Starfield has a reasonable 2,900. "If the same game had been released by not Bethesda, it would have been received differently," Nesmith remarks. "I don't think it's in the same caliber as the other two, you know, Fallout or Skyrim, or Elder Scrolls rather, but I think it's a good game." Two years in, Bethesda answers player hopes and says it's improving Starfield space travel: "Part of the team has been focused on space gameplay to make the travels there more rewarding."
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