Hearthfire is another
downloadable expansion for The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim. Unlike
previous expansion Dawnguard, which added a series of new
quest and enemies, Hearthfire is about what the hero of Skyrim
gets up to during his downtime, allowing you to build and design
your own house. You can have useful facilities like alchemy labs
(presumably one used for the actual, magical sort of alchemy, as
opposed to the sort of home-based chemistry facility that about a
third of the guys I knew in high school are probably doing prison
time for by now) and greenhouses (again, presumably...), as well as
display cases to show off the exotic weapons and items you've found
in your adventures and a trophy room to display the exotic creatures
you've killed with them.
You design your new residence yourself
and can either oversee its construction personally or hire a steward
to do it for you. You can even start a family by having your spouse
move in and adopting some kids.(Biological kids are not an option,
unfortunately, since by the time the player has unlocked the ability
to build a house excessive exposure to the draconic spiritual
energies of the Thu'um shouts have already left the
protagonist sterile.)
It sounds nice, and having a location where I can show off all the cool stuff I've acquired in my adventures is something I've long wanted in an Elder Scrolls game. That said, it is sort of an odd man out placed alongside the premises of prior Elder Scrolls releases and expansions. Consider:
The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
As a bloody civil war rages across the land, you must battle an army
of resurrected ancient dragons who have returned to wage war against
all of humanity, led by a colossal soul-eating dragon-god who's
commonly referred to with epithets like “World Eater” and has
just returned after millennia of banishment beyond time and space in
accordance with ancient prophecies about the destruction of the
cosmos. You become the Dragonborn, a legendary warrior with the blood
and soul of a dragon whose very voice has the power to lay his
enemies low.
The Elder Scrolls V: Dawnguard
To save the world from an eternity of darkness, you must battle a
monstrous host of vampires who seek to cast the world into
everlasting night through an ancient magical ritual that will
permanently BLOT OUT THE SUN. You can become a member of an ancient
order of vampire hunters, or transform into a terrifying immortal
creature of the night yourself.
The Elder Scrolls V: Hearthfire
You
need a place to keep your stuff and kill time when not busy with the
above. You can become a foster parent or an amateur gardener. An
amateur gardener with the soul of a dragon whose very voice has the
power to lay his enemies low who may or may not also be a vampire,
but still.