Starfield, the most recent offering from Bethesda Game Studios, has launched into the gaming stratosphere with both its ambitious scope and the franchise's signature quirks.
Despite being one of the studio's more robust launches, Starfield isn't immune to the sorts of bugs and glitches that the past games like The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim and Fallout 4 both featured, much to the amusement of fans.
As critics and players alike delve into this vast universe, a lingering question remains: Do the minor bugs take away from the experience or do they actually add to the chaotic allure of a Bethesda game?

Pete Hines, the same guy that recommends a certain must-watch Netflix documentary and Bethesda Softworks' man in the chair in terms of public relations and marketing, has a clear answer: "We embrace chaos."
As revealed by Hines to GamesIndustry.biz, Bethesda could easily opt for a safer, less risky game. But to do so would be to sacrifice the freeing feeling a lot if not most Bethesda titles are celebrated for. Bestheda's games are synonymous with freedom as well as exploration. Starfield, an RPG so expansive that reviewers are saying you don't play it to complete it; you play it to live it, is not an exception.



