• I’m not quite sure what your point is, but they aren’t “two different markets”.

      Sure, one is a (mostly) subscription model, but at the end of the day, they’re both digital Elder Scrolls games sold by the same publisher.

      • In the Venn diagram of people who will pay for ESO and people who will pay for ES6, I’m sure there’s a ton of overlap, but there’s probably some ESO players that aren’t necessarily huge fans of single player games, and I know for a fact a huge portion of people who played ES5 and will play ES6 will never play ESO. They are not the exact same group of consumers.

      • Prior to ESO, though, Elder Scrolls was a franchise entirely marketed at people who wanted single player RPG experiences.

        Even if it’s still Elder Scrolls content- a good portion of that original market is not going to have interest in a multiplayer experience. Or a subscription experience. Or a”live narrative” experience with gated content windows.

        It’s a very different experience at its core, so while there may be an overlap between the two markets in the Venn Diagram, it’s still a very different market segment than a pure single player outing.

      • They’re moderately different target audiences. ESO is probably mostly a subset of the main ES target audience. But I’d say most Elder Scrolls players won’t try ESO.

        Personally, I will likely buy TESVI if it holds up to expectations (which no, aren’t all that high right now, but I’m expecting a better game than Skyrim given 15 years of tech advances and all the money Bethesda has now compared to the late 00s when they started work on Skyrim). I haven’t tried ESO though, and likely won’t because I haven’t had time for MMOs in ages. That’s not to say I haven’t put hundreds of hours into Skyrim over the years - but that’s all on my own schedule. Same can be said for most of my gamer friends.

        Now there’s going to be overlap obviously, but likely TES:VI will sell way more copies (I’m talking orders of magnitude) than ESO has active subscribers, and likely won’t have a huge impact on ESO subs either - not a long term one, anyway. Actually, it might have a positive long-term impact if anything, because more people will find out about the universe and will be willing to try ESO.