Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

I did.

My youngest brother finished it in 2 days. I came home from worked and asked him where he was up to and he told me he finished it!!!

It's a great game but the last elder scrolls game i really got into was the second one. Daggerfall, now days i find it really hard to get into a lot of games.

Yeh I did find it suprisingly short in the main quest department but with all the sub quests and dungeons to siege it makes up for it, I wish they made morrowind with the same gfx engine though that would kick ass

I did.

My youngest brother finished it in 2 days. I came home from worked and asked him where he was up to and he told me he finished it!!!

It's a great game but the last elder scrolls game i really got into was the second one. Daggerfall, now days i find it really hard to get into a lot of games.

*cough* bullshit

How would you know you slack jawed junkbroad minded person?

The main quest is extremely short in oblivion.

And with the games difficulty scaled to your character level it can be completed with a very low level character.

You might have done the main quest in two days

But the rest takes donkeys.

I play it on and off, some quests you cant even do till you reach lvl 20... and there is NO wy you reach lvl 20 in 2 days.

char lvl speed totally depends on the major skills selected and how you play. If you want to wipe the floor with anything and everything you meet then you select only major skill that you can totally control the leveling of meaning you can max stats at each lvl up. Otherwise selecting all combat/spell abilities and only using these you can level extremely fast at the cost of over all power.

Yes you could finish the main quest in one or two days but that would be non-stop. The Morrowind main quest is also completeable in 1 day you just have to know how to skip most of it.

Edited by DivHunter

you can do they whole game with low level charcters.

It's all scaled to your level.

There is no need to level up at all in that game, unless you want to be stupily powerful with spells and what not.

i wish getting a promotion in real life is as easy as the mages guild. theres like 7-8 missions then you control it, i could hardly do any magic tricks and i was the head moncho. In morrowind it took forever to get any advancement in the guilds and houses ( may have just been i was shit at it)

I was disappointed in oblivion after playing morrowind for years to have finished the main quest in a matter of days :wave:

I played it, i must have put in about 75-100 hours, and only did one gate thingo cause i was curious... my entire time was spent looting and stealing and buying houses and shit...

its a rediculously huge game if you actually look around...

and whoever said Daggerfall, i commend you, that game was tops :(

  • 4 weeks later...
  • 2 weeks later...
Still playing it, but it's kinda boring. Although the graphics seem good at first, every dungeon seems very similar :P

If they were i wouldnt wander around for an hour at a time cause i get bloody confused which passage goes where :unsure:

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Yeah, that's fine**. But the numbers you came up with are just wrong. Try it for yourself. Put in any voltage from the possible range and see what result you get. You get nonsense. ** When I say "fine", I mean, it's still shit. The very simple linear formula (slope & intercept) is shit for a sensor with a non-linear response. This is the curve, from your data above. Look at the CURVE! It's only really linear between about 30 and 90 °C. And if you used only that range to define a curve, it would be great. But you would go more and more wrong as you went to higher temps. And that is why the slope & intercept found when you use 50 and 150 as the end points is so bad halfway between those points. The real curve is a long way below the linear curve which just zips straight between the end points, like this one. You could probably use the same slope and a lower intercept, to move that straight line down, and spread the error out. But you would 5-10°C off in a lot of places. You'd need to say what temperature range you really wanted to be most right - say, 100 to 130, and plop the line closest to teh real curve in that region, which would make it quite wrong down at the lower temperatures. Let me just say that HPTuners are not being realistic in only allowing for a simple linear curve. 
    • I feel I should re-iterate. The above picture is the only option available in the software and the blurb from HP Tuners I quoted earlier is the only way to add data to it and that's the description they offer as to how to figure it out. The only fields available is the blank box after (Input/ ) and the box right before = Output. Those are the only numbers that can be entered.
    • No, your formula is arse backwards. Mine is totally different to yours, and is the one I said was bang on at 50 and 150. I'll put your data into Excel (actually it already is, chart it and fit a linear fit to it, aiming to make it evenly wrong across the whole span. But not now. Other things to do first.
    • God damnit. The only option I actually have in the software is the one that is screenshotted. I am glad that I at least got it right... for those two points. Would it actually change anything if I chose/used 80C and 120C as the two points instead? My brain wants to imagine the formula put into HPtuners would be the same equation, otherwise none of this makes sense to me, unless: 1) The formula you put into VCM Scanner/HPTuners is always linear 2) The two points/input pairs are only arbitrary to choose (as the documentation implies) IF the actual scaling of the sensor is linear. then 3) If the scaling is not linear, the two points you choose matter a great deal, because the formula will draw a line between those two points only.
    • Nah, that is hella wrong. If I do a simple linear between 150°C (0.407v) and 50°C (2.98v) I get the formula Temperature = -38.8651*voltage + 165.8181 It is perfectly correct at 50 and 150, but it is as much as 20° out in the region of 110°C, because the actual data is significantly non-linear there. It is no more than 4° out down at the lowest temperatures, but is is seriously shit almost everywhere. I cannot believe that the instruction is to do a 2 point linear fit. I would say the method I used previously would have to be better.
×
×
  • Create New...