Same way any other free game is free, even when they come with a financial requirement. Every single free game on Steam requires a computer - the game is still free even if the computer isn’t.
If you pay for Skyrim, you pay for Skyrim… you can then get Enderal for free.
Enderal is absolutely goated. Wish I had finished it but I think other stuff came up or I had a soft lock or something. Either way I’m sure it’s patched and the 40ish hours I put it was 10/10.
It’s come a long way, but ultimately it’s built using Skyrim’s blocks, so stability is definitely not its strong point.
Advice is to save frequently - not just quicksave, but a hard save that won’t get overridden. Soft locks do happen if just right thing fucks up, like a quest item clipping through the floor.
Add “completely free” to the list and you’ve got Enderal.
It says you need to own Skyrim to play it, not sure how that is “free”.
It’s a mod. That’s how mods work.
Same way any other free game is free, even when they come with a financial requirement. Every single free game on Steam requires a computer - the game is still free even if the computer isn’t.
If you pay for Skyrim, you pay for Skyrim… you can then get Enderal for free.
Enderal is absolutely goated. Wish I had finished it but I think other stuff came up or I had a soft lock or something. Either way I’m sure it’s patched and the 40ish hours I put it was 10/10.
Tempted to go back into it again
It’s come a long way, but ultimately it’s built using Skyrim’s blocks, so stability is definitely not its strong point.
Advice is to save frequently - not just quicksave, but a hard save that won’t get overridden. Soft locks do happen if just right thing fucks up, like a quest item clipping through the floor.
Also command console is your best friend.
Full pitch in the linked comment.
Speaking of, @StringPotatoTheory@lemmy.world, did you ever get to dive in?