The Elder Scrolls Online Morrowind Expansion Feels Like Coming Home

  • Date: 2017-05-25
  • Views: 2231

Morrowind is an expansion to The Elder  Scrolls Online. It brings a new adventure, the new Warden class, and a  new 4v4v4 player versus player combat set in arena-style environments.


The Elder Scrolls Online Morrowind Server Launch Times

  •    Los Angeles – 02:00 PDT

  •    New York – 05:00 EDT

  •    London – 10:00 BST

  •    Berlin/Paris – 11:00 CEST

  •    Moscow – 12:00 MSK

  •    Tokyo – 18:00 JST

  •    Sau Paolo – 06:00 BRT

  •    Sydney – 19:00 AEST

  •   Auckland – 21:00 NZST


    And just so everyone does not panic, it is worth noting that servers across the globe will go down before Morrowind officially launches on 6 June.

  • Following a brand new tutorial, The Elder Scrolls Online’s Morrowind expansion, now launched in early access, brings us right back to the docks of Seyda Neen on the island of Vvardenfell. It’s like we never left.

    The biggest question leading into the new starting experience in the Morrowind expansion is: Will we begin in a jail cell, as is tradition in The Elder Scrolls, or as a prisoner on a boat, as seen in The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind, the game whose lands this expansion revisits? Why not both?


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    The tutorial begins on a boat, where the player is but a simple passenger. When that boat is dashed against some conveniently-placed rocks, the player blacks out, only to awaken in a jail cell. They are now the prisoner of a group of vile slavers, though that doesn’t last for long.


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    A series of quests aimed at teaching the basics to new or returning characters leads the player out into the wilds, where there are giant mushrooms to gawk at and slavers to punish for their slaving ways.


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    The Morrowind expansion also introduces the Warden class to the MMO, a support character who likes to play with animals and ice. They’ve got a little damage, a little healing and a little buffing. I’ve not spent too much time with the class yet, only experiencing the first few levels, but I am confident that the ability to summon a bear will make the awkward early moments of attacking people with phantom flying lizards worthwhile.


    The two best things about the new starting area are that it is new and that it is short. The previous tutorial experience was a relatively drawn-out affair in which players trudged over gloomy mountains and through gloomy caves to do gloomy things. This time around we’re fighting for our freedom and taking down an infamous slaver ring, and we get it done in under ten minutes, or your money back.


    Once the tutorial ends the player finds themselves on the docks of Seyda Neen. If the city seems familiar, it’s exactly the same town the player starts off in The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind several hundred years later. It’s amazing how little has changed between the events of the MMO and the original game.


    Here’s the original:


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    And here’s the view from the dock in The Elder Scrolls Online:


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    It’s more detailed and a good deal more laggy than I remembered, but it’s definitely the same place.


    Check out the video atop the post for a play through the new starter area and my first few steps into the mushroom-speckled lands of Morrowind, and look for more as I continue to explore The Elder Scrolls Online’s first major expansion.


    Thank you for reading and good luck in your next adventure. Or you can buy some ESO gold on our site that will help you get a more pleasant game journey! 

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