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Oblivion’s setting felt “a bit generic” says Skyrim dev

Skyrim "a reaction to what Oblivion was".
This article is over 13 years old and may contain outdated information

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The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim’s concept artists have revealed how they went about setting the latest entry in Bethesda’s RPG series apart from it’s predecessor.

In a fascinating podcast hosted on the game’s official site, the game’s art team revealed that the brief with Skyrim was to create a more distinct, believable world with a greater focus on its people and culture.

“It was a reaction to what Oblivion was as a game,” explained lead artist Matt Carofano.

“Oblivion was a very classic medieval setting, and we felt some of that was a bit generic. We wanted to do something that showed a lot more of the culture of the people who lived there. Skyrim was all about creating a world that seemed believable.”

Concept artist Adam Adamowicz explained that the team had a wide remit to start with, before Howard later reviewed the work and narrowed the focus.

“It was completely blue sky,” he said. “[Executive director] Todd [Howard] said, ‘Sit down and draw a bunch of cool, weird s***, and we’ll look at it and decide what’s worthwhile and what’s really stupid.'”

Conan, Viking culture and and the work of [lauded American fantasy artist] Frank Frazetta were all apparently early touchstones for the team to draw on.

“I would pull a lot of Conan references, because there’s a lot of different Conan art that I like,” explained Howard.

“One of our early influences that I did show them was the McFarlane Conan action figure set. If you look at the Conan series they did, there’s a great vibe in that stuff.”

Sounds like it was a painful process though. According to Adamowicz, “probably about 90 per cent of that [early work] didn’t get used.”

Bethesda posted an accompanying video revealing some of the concepts the art team came up with. Take a look below.


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Prima Games Staff
The staff at Prima Games.