The rumors and the Steam listings were real: Oblivion is back. On Tuesday, Bethesda formally announced a remaster of the 2006 open-world RPG — developed by Dark Souls: Remastered studio Virtuos — and then promptly released it.
The precursor to Skyrim is available right now on PlayStation 5, Windows PC, and Xbox Series X for $49.99. PC players can get it on Steam. Game Pass Ultimate subscribers will have access to it on PC and Xbox too.
Oblivion Remastered uses Unreal Engine 5 to give the entire world a high-resolution makeover with improved lighting and textures. While it’s technically the first Bethesda game to run on an engine separate from the studio’s propriety ones, it still uses parts of the old engine to keep things close to the original.The remaster has changes to the UI and leveling system to be closer to modern RPGs. Enemy combat animations, sound and visual effects are more realistic to add some heft to the game’s first-person combat too. There’s even a sprint button now.
We’ve modernized a lot, but it’s still the same incredible adventure and the same carefully crafted world,” a Bethesda’s external projects and studio director Tom Mustaine said during the stream.
Naturally, everyone’s next question is whether or not you can create a stairway into the sky with paint brushes, or reproduce any of the other bugs from the original Oblivion. Even though the game is still running on its original engine behind the scenes, we don’t know if any of these things have been changed yet.
The same goes for mod support, a feature that is usually synonymous with Bethesda RPGs. The folks on Nexus Mods are out there changing Skyrim and Fallout 4 into entirely different games. Bethesda didn’t say if existing Oblivion mods can be brought over, nor has it said if it’ll be as easily moddable as the original game. But given how popular the Bethesda modding community is, I’m sure we’ll find out soon
The precursor to Skyrim is available right now on PlayStation 5, Windows PC, and Xbox Series X for $49.99. PC players can get it on Steam. Game Pass Ultimate subscribers will have access to it on PC and Xbox too.
Oblivion Remastered uses Unreal Engine 5 to give the entire world a high-resolution makeover with improved lighting and textures. While it’s technically the first Bethesda game to run on an engine separate from the studio’s propriety ones, it still uses parts of the old engine to keep things close to the original.The remaster has changes to the UI and leveling system to be closer to modern RPGs. Enemy combat animations, sound and visual effects are more realistic to add some heft to the game’s first-person combat too. There’s even a sprint button now.
We’ve modernized a lot, but it’s still the same incredible adventure and the same carefully crafted world,” a Bethesda’s external projects and studio director Tom Mustaine said during the stream.
Naturally, everyone’s next question is whether or not you can create a stairway into the sky with paint brushes, or reproduce any of the other bugs from the original Oblivion. Even though the game is still running on its original engine behind the scenes, we don’t know if any of these things have been changed yet.
The same goes for mod support, a feature that is usually synonymous with Bethesda RPGs. The folks on Nexus Mods are out there changing Skyrim and Fallout 4 into entirely different games. Bethesda didn’t say if existing Oblivion mods can be brought over, nor has it said if it’ll be as easily moddable as the original game. But given how popular the Bethesda modding community is, I’m sure we’ll find out soon
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NewsTranscript
00:00The rumors and the Steam listings were real.
00:03Oblivion is back.
00:04On Tuesday, Bethesda formally announced a remaster of the 2006 open-world RPG,
00:10developed by Dark Souls, remastered Studio Virtuos, and then promptly released it.
00:16The precursor to Skyrim is available right now on PlayStation 5, Windows PC,
00:21and Xbox Series X for $49.99.
00:25PC players can get it on Steam.
00:27Game Pass Ultimate subscribers will have access to it on PC and Xbox too.
00:33Oblivion Remastered uses Unreal Engine 5 to give the entire world a high-resolution makeover
00:40with improved lighting and textures.
00:43While it's technically the first Bethesda game to run on an engine separate from the studio's propriety ones,
00:48it still uses parts of the old engine to keep things close to the original.
00:52The remaster has changes to the UI and leveling system to be closer to modern RPGs.
00:57Enemy combat animations, sound, and visual effects are more realistic
01:02to add some heft to the game's first-person combat too.
01:06There's even a sprint button now.
01:08We've modernized a lot, but it's still the same incredible adventure
01:12and the same carefully crafted world.
01:15A Bethesda's external projects and studio director Tom Mustin said during the stream,
01:20naturally, everyone's next question is whether or not you can create a stairway into the sky with paintbrushes
01:27or reproduce any of the other bugs from the original Oblivion.
01:31Even though the game is still running on its original engine behind the scenes,
01:34we don't know if any of these things have been changed yet.
01:38The same goes for mod support,
01:40a feature that is usually synonymous with Bethesda RPGs.
01:44The folks on Nexus Mods are out there changing Skyrim and Fallout 4 into entirely different games.
01:52Bethesda didn't say if existing Oblivion Mods can be brought over,
01:56nor has it said if it'll be as easily moddable as the original game.
02:00But given how popular the Bethesda modding community is,
02:03I'm sure we'll find out soon.
02:05I'm sure we'll find out soon.