Quests and Adventures
For all its strengths, Skyrim never got the questing aspect quite right. The game’s many questlines are fairly straightforward and predictable, and most of its dungeons are as well. Librum only touches the worst offenders among Skyrim’s vanilla quests, but it adds a great deal of new content to experience. Putting together dozens of curated quest and adventure mods, Librum’s new content totals to hundreds of new quests and new areas to explore, including more questlines than are in the vanilla game, and several extensive dungeon systems and expansive new lands. In compiling these mods, there were a few specific requirements I upheld (excluding many otherwise fantastic mods, unfortunately):
- Every line of dialogue is voiced, and always of high quality.
- Every addition is lore-friendly, at least within the limits of artistic license.
- Every addition is balanced (within reason), interesting, and natural within the existing game world.
With that in mind, here are the major new quest mods included in Librum:
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Legacy of the Dragonborn: Without a doubt, the largest museum curator simulator available for Skyrim. Legacy adds a large museum, the Dragonborn Gallery, to Solitude, in which you can store and display nearly any artifact from your collection. It comes complete with a new archaeology guild and an expansive questline.
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Beyond Skyrim: Bruma: The first release of the ambitious and far-reaching Beyond Skyrim project, Bruma allows you to explore the titular region in the north of Cyrodiil, which you may remember from The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion. It features excellent quests, locations, characters, top-notch voice-acting, and polish matching Bethesda’s own.
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Vigilant: Join forces with the Vigilant of Stendarr to face a growing threat from the Harvester of Souls himself, Molag Bal. Vigilant features a huge, branching main quest, steeped in the darker sides of Elder Scrolls lore, with many secrets to uncover and difficult choices to make.
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Project AHO: Working with (or against!) the hidden Telvanni outpost of Sadrith Kegran, discover one of the best-kept secrets of Dwarven invention. Project AHO offers a beautifully-rendered DLC-sized area to explore, as well as a branching main quest and many Dwemeri secrets to unlock.
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Carved Brink: From the makers of Project AHO, Carved Brink offers a look at two new planes of Oblivion: Peryite’s Pits and the all-new Faceted Stones. Explore the excellent world design of the Haem Projects team through two main questlines, using puzzle-solving and new forms of transportation to traverse these otherwise untransversable alien landscapes.
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Clockwork: Clockwork offers a fully-featured player home, the Chlodovech family’s Clockwork Castle, high in the Velothi mountains. Uncover the secrets of the castle’s founding and of its mysterious inhabitants through a fleshed-out and horror-themed questline.
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Moon and Star: Explore the quaint Dunmeri village of Little Vivec, floating in the center of Lake Ilinalta. Though charged with protecting Little Vivec from a dangerous criminal, you may find that Little Vivec and its inhabitants are hiding more than it seems.
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The Tools of Kagrenac: The Tools of Kagrenac completes the story of Arniel Gane and the legendary dagger Keening. Delve through sprawling new dungeons and face challenging new obstacles to uncover these secrets and claim the most legendary Dwarven artifacts for yourself.
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The Forgotten City: The only mod so far to win a National Writers’ Guild award, The Forgotten City offers a unique and enthralling mystery set in its titular city in the far reaches of Skyrim.
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Moonpath to Elsweyr: One of the great classics of Skyrim modding, but remastered for a modern experience. Moonpath to Elsweyr brings you south to the heart of the Khajiiti homeland in order to recover the legendary Staff of Indarys.
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The Wheels of Lull: Return to Sotha Sil’s mysterious clockwork city and take a trip through the stranger side of Elder Scrolls lore.
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Teldryn Serious: Teldryn Serious heavily expands the backstory of the mercenary Teldryn Sero, taking you around Solstheim once more to uncover a dangerous plot and defend Raven Rock.
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Helgen Reborn: A classic among Skyrim mods, Helgen Reborn gives you an opportunity to rebuild and revive the town of Helgen.
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Wyrmstooth: Now that it’s back and purged of bugs, Wyrmstooth allows you to travel to the island of Wyrmstooth, north of Solitude, to rid the island of its dragon menace.
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Midwood Isle: A large new land with plenty of exciting features to explore, including a player home, two new shouts, and eight spells.
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The Notice Board: The Notice Board overhauls radiant questing in Skyrim, adding two notice boards outside each major inn in Skyrim.
On top of these new quests and dungeons, Librum makes tons of improvements to vanilla quests and questlines:
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Civil War Overhaul: CWO restores all of the cut civil war battles Bethesda had planned, improving the scope and AI of these battles, adding random sieges, and generally totally rewriting the civil war. Importantly, joining one side will cause the hold guards of the other to be hostile towards you.
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Cutting Room Floor: Less a quest mod than an overall content-restoration project, CRF reintroduces several cut locations and towns, small or miscellaneous quests, and general improvements to vanilla quests.
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The Choice Is Yours: Most quests now have an opt-out option, in case you don’t actually want to go beat a priest to death three times in an obviously-haunted house.
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Even Better Quest Objectives: EBQO fixes the lack of information in vanilla Skyrim by providing Morrowind-level (except actually correct) descriptions of your quest objectives.
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Finding Derkeethus: Loosely an addon to EBQO, Finding Derkeethus fixes several conceptual problems with the quest to rescue Derkeethus from Darkwater Pass.
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Somebody Else’s Problem: When Eltrys tells you to meet him to discuss the Forsworn Conspiracy, you can now tell him where to shove it.
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Finding Helgi and Laelette: This mod fixes what would have been an interesting investigative mission.
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Better College Application: When Faralda asks you why you want to enter the college, your response now actually determines the spell you’re tested on.
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Save the Icerunner: If you don’t want to brutally murder a ship full of people, now you don’t have to.
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Chill Out Aela: When Aela asks you why you didn’t help fight the giant, you now have a third option to choose from.
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End Times: To double down on the NSFMQ pacing, you now need to kill Alduin within a set amount of time, or he will literally eat the world.
Now, one of my all-time favorite Elder Scrolls experiences is Daggerfall’s dungeon delving. Despite the numerous inaccessible areas and inescapable portal networks, there was something distinctly adventurous, epic, and psychologically rewarding about making your way through one of the game’s gargantuan dungeons. Librum attempts to recreate this feeling with its own suite of dungeon mods. Together, the following mods fill Skyrim (and Solstheim, and other game areas) with a healthy number of new caverns, ruins, and more – ranging from slightly-more-involved-than-vanilla to Daggerfall-style labyrinthine dungeons.
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Skyrim Underground: Skyrim Underground adds a gigantic network of dungeons below Skyrim’s surface, enabling you to travel from Solitude to Riften on foot, uncovering secret passages, facing new and powerful opponents, and discovering many secrets.
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Forgotten Dungeons: Forgotten Dungeons adds many Daggerfall-style dungeons to the Skyrim and Solstheim landscapes. They can be explored independently, for their own prizes, but many have also been enabled for Skyrim’s radiant quest system.
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Land of Vominheim: With several islands to explore as well as plenty of dungeons and caves, you’ll find yourself immersed in Vominheim as you’re led primarily with written notes.
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Darkend: Expect to see beautiful environments and architecture, as well as terrifying foes that test your skills.
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Konahrik’s Accoutrements: This mod adds a great deal of new content surrounding Skyrim’s Dragon Priests.
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Skyrim Sewers: Skyrim Sewers adds sewer systems below Windhelm, Solitude, and Whiterun, bringing back the age-old Elder Scrolls experience of murdering rats, discovering secrets, and getting lost in the sewers.
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The Lost Wonders of Mzark: Far beyond Skyrim’s northern border, the great Dwemer lord Mzark left his final projects and greatest artifacts, along with his most clever traps and puzzles.
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Bleak Falls Barrow Revisited: Bleak Falls Barrow has been redone and significantly expanded, turning it from a cookie-cutter linear Skyrim dungeon into a mysterious and labyrinthine dungeon worthy of its in-game reputation.