Skyrim is the perfect game for pscyhoanalysis. The game allowed you to do anything you want, and let's be honest: that probably meant organizing your wardrobe, delivering letters, picking flowers, and chasing butterflies. Don't be embarrassed. For most people, the gameplay features of an open-world RPG are identical to the side effects of synthetic estrogen.
Personally, I found that when a video game allows me to pickpocket the clothes off women, it's all I will ever do. If Skyrim ever installs a subway system, I'm the man their signs will warn girls about.
But when I saw this YouTube video made of a Skyrim serial killer's corpse-decorated house, I realized turning an entire world into ****** underwear models was a pretty pedestrian level of crazy.
This maniac d****d the beheaded bodies of a dozen women across his home's furniture and decorated his shelves with their faces. That's ****ing crazy. That's crazier than the things your dentist whispers in your ear while you're asleep. This Skyrim player had the opportunity to act out his wildest fantasies, and it was turning imaginary people into bric-a-brac. It's bat**** nuts, but in a way it's a happy story. Because years ago, when this gamer was kidnapped by *** offenders, who would have thought the long-term consequences would be so mild?
How Much Time Would This Take?
Skyrim has an intricate physics engine that allows players to lift and rotate any object. For reasons the game itself doesn't quite understand, this often causes all nearby items to wiggle violently and explode in random directions. Getting an object in Skyrim to lay at rest in its intended location is like trying to take a team photo at a Parkinson Support Group. The player from this video managed to get a mutilated woman corpse on every chair in his house and nine heads symmetrically placed on a bookshelf. Even if you had already lured all the women into your home, that's still hours of delicate fussing to get their bloody remains in place. Not that it really matters. When someone catches you playing in a pile of human heads they don't relax when you tell them, "This shouldn't take very long at all!"
Full Article - The 5 Most Insane Things Ever Accomplished in a Video Game:
Personally, I found that when a video game allows me to pickpocket the clothes off women, it's all I will ever do. If Skyrim ever installs a subway system, I'm the man their signs will warn girls about.
But when I saw this YouTube video made of a Skyrim serial killer's corpse-decorated house, I realized turning an entire world into ****** underwear models was a pretty pedestrian level of crazy.
This maniac d****d the beheaded bodies of a dozen women across his home's furniture and decorated his shelves with their faces. That's ****ing crazy. That's crazier than the things your dentist whispers in your ear while you're asleep. This Skyrim player had the opportunity to act out his wildest fantasies, and it was turning imaginary people into bric-a-brac. It's bat**** nuts, but in a way it's a happy story. Because years ago, when this gamer was kidnapped by *** offenders, who would have thought the long-term consequences would be so mild?
How Much Time Would This Take?
Skyrim has an intricate physics engine that allows players to lift and rotate any object. For reasons the game itself doesn't quite understand, this often causes all nearby items to wiggle violently and explode in random directions. Getting an object in Skyrim to lay at rest in its intended location is like trying to take a team photo at a Parkinson Support Group. The player from this video managed to get a mutilated woman corpse on every chair in his house and nine heads symmetrically placed on a bookshelf. Even if you had already lured all the women into your home, that's still hours of delicate fussing to get their bloody remains in place. Not that it really matters. When someone catches you playing in a pile of human heads they don't relax when you tell them, "This shouldn't take very long at all!"
Full Article - The 5 Most Insane Things Ever Accomplished in a Video Game:
Comment