IGN Logo
Skip to content
IGN Plus
Home
Guides
Interactive Maps
Playlist
Store
Rewards
Privacy Policy
Terms of Use

News

All NewsColumnsPlayStationXboxNintendoPCMobileMoviesTelevisionComicsTech

Reviews

All ReviewsEditor's ChoiceGame ReviewsMovie ReviewsTV Show ReviewsTech Reviews

Discover

Percy Jackson World GuidePreordersPlayStation 5 HubBest Tech for GamingPlanet PokemonVideo Game TrailersMovie TrailersTV TrailersKingdom Come Deliverance IIBorderlands 4 HubUniversal Studios Hollywood HubDiscover Universal Orlando ResortUpcoming GamesUpcoming MoviesUpcoming TV Shows

Videos

Original ShowsPopularTrailersGameplayAll Videos
Elder Scrolls: Oblivion Remastered

Opinion: The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Hit Harder Than Skyrim – And Still Does

Oblivion changed everything back in 2006, and I’m so happy it’s back in 2025.

Xbox Unlocked
By Ryan McCaffrey
Updated: Apr 22, 2025 7:20pm UTC
95 comments

Ask most gamers who were around for the Xbox 360 and, Red Ring of Death aside, odds are most of them will share a lot of fond memories with you. And The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion generated plenty of those memories for a lot of Xbox 360 owners. I’m one of them. I worked at Official Xbox Magazine at the time, and for whatever reason, the hugely successful port of The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind to Xbox never quite hooked me. But right from the jump, Oblivion – which was initially planned to be a day-one launch title for the second Xbox – did. We did multiple cover stories on Oblivion leading up to launch – the screenshots alone blew everyone away – and I eagerly volunteered for each trip out to Bethesda in sleepy Rockville, Maryland.

Then, when it finally came time to review Oblivion – and this is back in the days when exclusive reviews were a common, accepted thing – I again eagerly jumped at the chance. I returned to Rockville one more time and holed up in a conference room in Bethesda’s basement for four days. I spent four consecutive – and glorious – 11-hour days almost literally living in Cyrodiil, spending almost every waking moment inside this stunning, wide-open, next-gen medieval fantasy world. Before I boarded my return flight home, I’d clocked 44 hours prior to penning OXM’s 9.5 out of 10 review of Oblivion, which I wholeheartedly stand by to this day. It was an incredible game, filled with gripping quests (Dark Brotherhood, anyone?), off-the-beaten-path surprises (if you know about the unicorn, you know), and so much more. Because I was playing a submission build at Bethesda – meaning, a mostly finished version of the game on an Xbox 360 debug kit rather than a regular retail console – I had to start over when I got my final boxed disc copy of the game I’d already put about two full real-life days into.

The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered Screenshots

I dropped another 130 hours or so into The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion without hesitation,so it’s probably no surprise to hear that I’m absolutely thrilled it’s been remastered and re-released on modern platforms.

For the younger generation of gamers who grew up on Skyrim, the just-released The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered will be their first “new” mainline Elder Scrolls game since Skyrim first released.
“

In fact, I’m envious of the whole generation of younger gamers who grew up with Skyrim and thus, that is The Elder Scrolls for them. Because for them, the just-released The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered will be their first “new” mainline Elder Scrolls game since Skyrim released (for the first of many, many times) over 13 years ago – while franchise fans of all ages continue to wait for The Elder Scrolls VI, which is likely another 4-5 years away.

Although if I’m being honest, I doubt Oblivion will hit the same way for them as it did for me in March of 2006, because, for starters, it’s a two-decade-old game (side note: shout-out to Bethesda for delivering this week instead of waiting an extra year when Oblivion will hit its far-more-elegant-sounding 20th anniversary instead of just having passed its 19th). Other games have built upon what Oblivion did, including several by Bethesda itself: Fallout 3, Skyrim, Fallout 4, and Starfield. And second, it just doesn’t pack the same visual punch that it did in 2006, when I’d argue it was the first true next-gen game of the HD Era ushered in by the Xbox 360. Obviously the remaster looks better than the original release – that’s the point, of course – but it doesn’t stand head and shoulders above nearly every other game as something that you’ve never seen before. By definition – or at least in practice – remasters aim to make an older game look modern on current platforms. It’s a sharp contrast to a proper remake a la Resident Evil, which carries the expectation of starting from scratch and, in turn, looking as good or better than anything else on the market.

Which Race Are You Playing As in Oblivion?

The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion was the right game at the right time. By taking full advantage of HD televisions and expanding the scope and scale of what gamers could expect from an open-world game, it was a punch in the face to console gamers who, up to that point, had spent their entire gaming lives seeing their interactive worlds through an interlaced 640x480 television. (Although speaking of punches in the face, prior to Oblivion’s March release, in February 2006, EA released Fight Night Round 3, which was jaw-droppingly gorgeous itself.)

My memories of Oblivion are plenty, as it was a world with so much to discover and so much to do. For first-time Oblivion players, let me give you a recommendation: either blast through the main quest as quickly as possible, or save it until you’ve exhausted every last sidequest or open-world activity. Why? Well, the Oblivion gates will start randomly spawning and pestering you once you start down that main questline’s path, so for my money it’s best to seal them off straight away.

Anyway, the technological leap made from Morrowind to Oblivion might not ever happen again – though I suppose if we wait long enough for The Elder Scrolls 6, maybe it will. But at the very least, playing Oblivion Remastered won’t present such a staunch difference from any release of Skyrim, and for that I suppose those same younger gamers who grew up with Skyrim won’t get what I had. But no matter if you’re playing Oblivion for the first time or you’ve clocked hundreds of hours with it, its fully realized medieval fantasy world and the surprises and adventures contained within it have always made it my favorite Elder Scrolls game. And I’m thrilled it’s back, even if its surprise release was spoiled many times over before it finally showed up again.

Ryan McCaffrey is IGN's executive editor of previews and host of both IGN's weekly Xbox show, Podcast Unlocked, as well as our monthly(-ish) interview show, IGN Unfiltered. He's a North Jersey guy, so it's "Taylor ham," not "pork roll." Debate it with him on Twitter at @DMC_Ryan.

IGN LogoRecommends

Baldur’s Gate TV Series Set for HBO, Will Be a Continuation of Baldur’s Gate 3's Story
Baldur’s Gate TV Series Set for HBO, Will Be a Continuation of Baldur’s Gate 3's Story
56
Fallout Season 2 Ending Explained and Biggest Questions Answered
Fallout Season 2 Ending Explained and Biggest Questions Answered
19
The 100 Best Xbox Games of All Time - Complete List
The 100 Best Xbox Games of All Time - Complete List
450

In This Article

The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered
The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion RemasteredBethesda Game Studios
Initial Release: Apr 22, 2025
ESRB: Mature
Nintendo Switch 2PlayStation 5Xbox Series X/SPC
Related Guides
OverviewCharacter Building GuideThings to Do First in OblivionThings Oblivion Doesn't Tell You

Xbox Unlocked Column

See all
43 issues

This Xbox Generation Will Be Remembered for One Thing: Greed

Opinion: The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Hit Harder Than Skyrim – And Still Does

Halo 2 at 20: Remembering My Favorite Xbox Game Ever

Xbox Just Had it Best Showcase Ever – and at the Perfect Time

ISSUE NO. 39

Phil Spencer and the Battle for Xbox’s Soul

ISSUE NO. 38

Phil Spencer Has Now Been Head of Xbox for 10 Years; We Look Back at His First Decade

ISSUE NO. 37

The Xbox Brand Faces an Inferno. Will Something Better Rise from the Ashes?

ISSUE NO. 36

Xbox’s Developer Direct 2024 Totally Delivered

ISSUE NO. 35

Celebrating Halo 2’s Online Greatness Ahead of its 20th Anniversary

ISSUE NO. 34

My Favorite Xbox Moments of 2023

Load More
Comments
IGN Logo
Reviews•News•CES 2026•Game Guides•How to Watch Guides•LEGO Set Reviews•Board Game Reviews•Planet Pokemon•IGN Store•Game Release Dates•Map Genie•Top Deals•Eurogamer•IGN YouTube•HowLongToBeat•Maxroll•VG247•Rock Paper Shotgun•IGN TikTok•IGN on X•Contact Us•Privacy Policy•Terms of Use