Bethesda keeps showing a little bit more of 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Starfield instead of showing a lot more of Starfield, and each time it inspires plenty of worry about whether the game will actually be ready in time for release. Recently Bethes💜da announced a new launch date of Septembe💟r 6, with its first big gameplay showcase arriving on June 11. If itও’s coming so soon, shouldn’t we have seen more of it 💦by now? Not necessarily.

That isn’t to say there’s no cause for concern. Horns, the insider who leaked news of Hi-Fi Rush! ahead of its surprise announcement back in January, has claimed that both Starfield and Arkane's Redfall are in rough shape, and that Microsoft is trying to hurry them out the door to make up for its rumored losses on Azure. Given that Bethesda's most recent launch, 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Fallout 76, was notoriously rocky, it wouldn't be a shock if Starfield ends up coming in hot.

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The fact that we haven't seen much gameplay, in and of itself, isn't a huge cause for alarm though. This is just how Bethesda handles launches.

starfield crater

Fallout 76 . Todd Howard took the stage weeks later at that year's E3 to give a of the multiplayer RPG and how it departs from previous titles in the series. Then, it launched later in November. The time from announcement to release was less than seven months.

Bethesda took a similar tack with Fallout 4 when it was at the end of a countdown in 2015. Howard then gave ahead of the game launching in November. The time from announcement to release was even shorter this time, with just six months separating the launch🍸 from the reveal. Again, significant gameplay was shown for the first time in June of the year of its release.

For most players, Fallout 4 and Fallout 76 aren't among the best-loved games in Bethesda’s catalog, so you might be thinking, "It makes sense that those games wouldn't get revealed until late in development. They're not that good!" But if you consider yourself a Bethesda fan, you probably like Skyrim, and The Elder Scrolls 5 got the same treatment. It was revealed slightly earlier than the two most recent Fallouts, with an announcement trailer unveiled on December 11, 2010 at the Spike Video Game Awards. Still, that makes for less than a year between announcement and release. Skyrim got a big spread in Game Informer in February 2011, and there was a press demo available at E3 that June. But, players didn't get to see that E3 footage until September 2011, just two months before the game launched.

The Player Holding The Nightingale Bow in Skyrim

Skyrim might not be your favorite Bethesda RPG, but you can't deny its impact. It's been released on basically everything that can play it, enjoying a long and prosperous life in the modding community. If this was the approach Bethesda took for Skyrim, it shouldn’t be a problem for Starfield.

It's basically a given that Bethesda games are buggy at launch. The studio makes big, complicated RPGs and that comes with the territory. But, at least right now, there's no reason to be worried on the basis of Starfield's marketing rollout. This is just how Bethesda does it.

NEXT: Starfield Can't Just Be Another Fallout Or Skyrim