Ideally you want to have a Draft Horse with maxed out carrying capacity, because in the end you’ll be able to gain 10 more inventory slots. The Draft Horse costs 42,700 gold and has a default carrying capacity of 10, which is higher than any other mount in ESO right now. If you want to be efficient, you should NOT feed Oats to just any mount.
Feeding your mount oats costs 250 gold a pop.As long as you have that mount active at the Stables, the carrying capacity is directly transferred to your character, effectively increasing your inventory slots by the same amount.
The key here is that feeding your mount Oats will increase its carrying capacity by 1. Your mount can be fed every 20 hours at a stable master, and you can feed the mount a total of 49 times. (I won’t venture too deep into mounts on this article but you can expect a mount guide soon enough.) Mounts in ESO have a progression system called Diet. The second way to increase the number of your inventory slots has nothing to do with pack vendors or bags, but your mounts. Bag SlotsĬarrying Capacity – Feed your mount wisely
You can upgrade your bags like this all the way to 110 inventory slots, and the last upgrade costs 19,200 gold. The first inventory upgrade to 70 slots costs 400 gold and the cost ramps up quite rapidly, as you can see in the table below. Hovering over shops on your map will also show the pack merchant icon. Pack Merchants, like other vendors in ESO usually have a banner next to their store. You can buy inventory space up to 110 slots just by purchasing pack upgrades from pack merchants. Upgrading your bags increases their size by 10. Oblivion Character Overhaul Hair Edition.espĮPVerdantGrove.The icon at the bottom represents a pack merchant vendor.ĭo note that there’s pack merchants in almost every major city in Tamriel, the above are merely the pack merchants in the first major zone you arrive in. ULE KvatchRebuilt-CheydinhalFalls patch.esp ġem_Vilja_Bruse_as_Clydesdale_horse_by_Xtudo.esp ULE OblivionUncut-ChorrolHinterland patch.esp ULS LindumOverhaul-ChorrolHinterland Patch.esp
Valenwood Improved – River Ethe EV – Patch.esp Valenwood Improved – Fallenleaf Everglade EV – Patch.esp Kvatch Rebuilt – No More Burned Ground.espĭLCFrostcrag – Unofficial Patch.esp Immersive Interiors – Landscape Addon.esp The installation is super stable, although a rather high number of mods.įor NPC’s: Oblivion Character Overhaul and Seamless OCOv2įor landscape and buildings: Qarl’s Texture Pack III Redimized and Imperial City Retextured
During the LP, the mods list varies, but very slightly.
With these kind of people developing a game, I just say bring it on, boys! 2 Comments Posted in Uncategorized Tagged Arena, computer roleplaying, cRPG, Daggerfall, elder scrolls, Julian LeFay, once lost games, Roleplaying, rpg, Ted Peterson A Small Patch for Lindumįollowing is a list of the mods installed for my Oblivion Let’s Play on YouTube.
There’s a website, a Twitter Account a Discord Server and a YouTube channel, but not much material on there yet. It’s all kinda new still and we don’t know much. Their intent is to create a game they say is going to restore choice, consequence and roleplaying to RPG’s, a spiritual successor to Daggerfall if you will. They’re also joined by Vijay Lakhsman who was one of the early developers of Arena (Lead Designer no less) and Daggerfall. Now, Phoenix, Peterson and LeFay have gotten together and formed a company called OnceLost Games. Skyrim is great, it’s awesome (I have 2000 hours in it, ffs), but it’s not an RPG it’s an action game with RPG elements, but it’s no more an RPG than Saints Row 2 to 4.
I’ve been on about this on my blog for years, how Bethesda slowly ripped out the RPG guts of the series to appeal to an ever larger mainstream audience. LeFay left Bethesda during the development of Morrowind.Īfter Daggerfall, as we know, the series took a turn for something else and slowly left the CRPG genre behind. Peterson wrote much of Elder Scrolls lore up until Oblivion and LeFay was Project Leader for Daggerfall and is sometimes referred to as “The Father of Elder Scrolls”. I wholeheartedly recommend watching them for anyone interested in the history of the Elder Scrolls games. Some time ago I published the two video interviews Indigo Gaming (Ian Phoenix) made on YouTube with Ted Peterson and Julian LeFay. And it doesn’t even have to do with the Elder Scrolls. I dunno, but this has the potential of being some of the biggest news in the Elder Scrolls community since the very creation of the series.