
The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion
Quite possibly the longest game you will play on Xbox 360 or PS3, but definitely not a mediocre lengthy game. Oblivion pulls you in from the get go and for the next century, you are stuck in the world of Cyrodil, completing quests, fighting Daedra, joining factions, or just taking a pilgrimage through the massive world. The main storyline is merely the beginning, gamers have yet to touch the surface of this giant event after halting the Oblivion invasion and saving Cyrodil, there are enough side missions to blow your head off, and the faction quests make for an even more interesting experience. Everything will draw in gamers all around, even if the gamer is nothing more than a gamer point hound, they will put in the man hours to complete Oblivion. The full completion of Oblivion isn't like with other games, other games being completed show a sign of skill and slight determination. Beating Oblivion is a respect, because people know how devoted you were, how your determination was that strong, and you feel the same towards the people who have completed it as well.
If you are interested in logging even more hours onto your game and the introduction of a new world, the additional content will stack and rack up your time as well, either questing for the ancient relics of the Divine Crusader to overcome a hellspawn demon, or by restoring a balance to the realm Shivering Isles. Personally completing both is that way to go, the Shivering Isles will bring humor and enjoyment, and the crusade leads to the most epic battle Oblivion has to offer.
If you have the time to play it, Oblivion is a must buy game, and I would even prefer that you buy it before anything else, because by the time you complete it games you wanted at the time you bought it will be insanely cheap (that's how long it takes). Oblivion gets a very time consuming 10 out of 10
Quite possibly the longest game you will play on Xbox 360 or PS3, but definitely not a mediocre lengthy game. Oblivion pulls you in from the get go and for the next century, you are stuck in the world of Cyrodil, completing quests, fighting Daedra, joining factions, or just taking a pilgrimage through the massive world. The main storyline is merely the beginning, gamers have yet to touch the surface of this giant event after halting the Oblivion invasion and saving Cyrodil, there are enough side missions to blow your head off, and the faction quests make for an even more interesting experience. Everything will draw in gamers all around, even if the gamer is nothing more than a gamer point hound, they will put in the man hours to complete Oblivion. The full completion of Oblivion isn't like with other games, other games being completed show a sign of skill and slight determination. Beating Oblivion is a respect, because people know how devoted you were, how your determination was that strong, and you feel the same towards the people who have completed it as well.
If you are interested in logging even more hours onto your game and the introduction of a new world, the additional content will stack and rack up your time as well, either questing for the ancient relics of the Divine Crusader to overcome a hellspawn demon, or by restoring a balance to the realm Shivering Isles. Personally completing both is that way to go, the Shivering Isles will bring humor and enjoyment, and the crusade leads to the most epic battle Oblivion has to offer.
If you have the time to play it, Oblivion is a must buy game, and I would even prefer that you buy it before anything else, because by the time you complete it games you wanted at the time you bought it will be insanely cheap (that's how long it takes). Oblivion gets a very time consuming 10 out of 10
