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Roman5: So then, what were YOU doing back in 2002?
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FraterPerdurabo: Playing Morrowind.
this.

also if its 10 years old are beth releasing it free to download? (i have about 10 copies but be good to know)
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reaver894: also if its 10 years old are beth releasing it free to download? (i have about 10 copies but be good to know)
That would be great. But somehow I find it very hard. :(

Happy birthday to the best game ever.
10 years have passed and I still haven't found another RPG that I rate as highly as Morrowind.
If anyone has a spare copy of this classic:
http://www.gog.com/en/forum/general/classifieds/post1928
10 years ago I was stumbling around the ashlands, very lost and very confused. Probably had some stat decreasing diseases too and didn't know how to get rid of them. Good times. Replays are always fun, but I can never be the lost and confused soul that I once were; seeing Silt Striders and Vivec for the first time.
I remember the first time I played Morrowind. That was the week I finally started to fall out with my parents which eventually led me to leave their house and never come back. It was a bad move, I'll admit, mostly because I didn't really have the money to support myself. What I did have however was a Gateway laptop and a car charger. I played Morrowind on the road, at rest stops, in the middle of camp grounds, and continued to do so until I defeated Dagoth Ur. After that I realized that I had moved into a crack house and was serving as some girl's slave to keep a roof over my head. It's funny how some games can make you lose perspective.
10 years ago I joined the army. Yay, that was fun....
Back then, I was playing Final Fantasy VII on my Playstation (hey, I was 14 at the time). I didn't get to enjoy Morrowind until last year. Love it (still hard, though. I can't seem to get enough money to get started. Any tips?)
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POLE7645: Back then, I was playing Final Fantasy VII on my Playstation (hey, I was 14 at the time). I didn't get to enjoy Morrowind until last year. Love it (still hard, though. I can't seem to get enough money to get started. Any tips?)
1. Train alchemy
2. Buy ingredients
3. Profit
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POLE7645: Back then, I was playing Final Fantasy VII on my Playstation (hey, I was 14 at the time). I didn't get to enjoy Morrowind until last year. Love it (still hard, though. I can't seem to get enough money to get started. Any tips?)
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Nightfall87: 1. Train alchemy
2. Buy ingredients
3. Profit
You mean making various potions and selling them? I'll try that. But first, I need money to train Alchemy.
Actually, best way to train alchemy is by making potions. :)

Find vendor with plenty of gold, stack his inventory with two ingredient needed for some potion until he has 500 pieces each, than buy them all. Thus begins click-fest. 500 clicks latter you'll have few hundred potions to sell and your alchemy will be much stronger.

Repeat until satisfied. And bare in mind that this can pretty much spoil the fun. As it can relatively easy give you indefinite amount of gold and tons of potions that can in a second transform you into demigod.
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Nightfall87: Actually, best way to train alchemy is by making potions. :)

Find vendor with plenty of gold, stack his inventory with two ingredient needed for some potion until he has 500 pieces each, than buy them all. Thus begins click-fest. 500 clicks latter you'll have few hundred potions to sell and your alchemy will be much stronger.

Repeat until satisfied. And bare in mind that this can pretty much spoil the fun. As it can relatively easy give you indefinite amount of gold and tons of potions that can in a second transform you into demigod.
Thanks. But what do you mean by "Stack his inventory with two ingredients"? I'm not sure I understood right.
Let's say that when you go to some merchant he has 10 stacks of ingredient X and 10 stacks of ingredient Y both required to make some potion. You buy them all and end interaction with that merchant. If you try to trade again he will no longer have that ingredients. So you'll have to wait 24 hours for him to restock his equipment. So he will again have 10 stacks of each ingredients. When you sell him previously bought stacks he will have them 20 each. Everytime he restock his equipment he will still have 20 of each ingredient.

Now you repeat this process. After next turn he'll have 40 stacks each. Than 80. Than 160. And so on.

I haven't played in a year or two so I may have forgot something. But this is roughly how to do it.
Post edited May 02, 2012 by Nightfall87
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Nightfall87: Actually, best way to train alchemy is by making potions. :)
Welp, unless you want to get technical and use in-game exploitation. Max 100 gold pieces to raise one skill to 100.
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SimonG: 10 years ago I joined the army. Yay, that was fun....
The Imperial Legion?