Arqade Asked by Daniel Beck on January 14, 2021
What’s amazing about these open world games is the freedom I have as a player. If I don’t want to follow the main story line for a while, and just explore, I can do that, and the game won’t break.
On the other hand I don’t particularly like the feeling of having made a significant, bad choice in the game, among the lines of Yeah, that dialog option you selected hours ago? This amazing quest line is now off limits.
If I recall correctly, in Morrowind, I had to progress through a few different guilds’ quests in the right order, otherwise it’d have stopped my progress in a few guilds.
As a Skyrim example, it doesn’t appear that the very first choice made in Helgen at the very beginning has much significance. If someone told me It’s not that significant, you still get to choose sides (or, rather not told me “This is important”), that’d help.
Another example: Based on a question I read here, I should probably make sure that I don’t throw away any of the dragon priest masks and need to make sure to collect one during a specific quest. This would be relevant for this topic if I could easily miss it otherwise while doing that question.
This includes accidental problems possibly caused by bugs: It appears it’s easily possible to lose the option to buy one or more of the houses due to bugs, and one needs to be careful about the order of playing through some quests.
It doesn’t matter too much which of the love triangle guys in Riverwood I support: That’s not nearly significant enough.
Are there non-obvious, hidden decision points in the quests and story lines? When playing in a certain area, doing a certain quest, what do I need to make sure to do or not do, to not accidentally prevent me from getting or achieving something significant?
I still want to explore on my own, but want to be aware of which choices are important.
This is somewhat related to that question.
The UESP wiki, 'Quest Timing' article has a detailed list of quests (and notes about those quests) that will have a significant impact on other quests and the game, in general. Some of them are due to bugs, and some are because they are designed to be that way.
It also recommends if a quest has to be done early or be postponed before/until another quest has been finished or another game event has happened, to prevent bugs or a negative impact on other quests, or the game.
The whole article is too big to be included here. I'll be adding some of the most notable quest categories and the quests under those categories related to your question:
Blood on the Ice
Why: The Necromancer Amulet is a Legendary-quality item very useful for low-level spellcasting characters, especially those interested in Conjuration, and can be sold for a lot of gold for a low-level character. There are numerous glitches associated with this quest, and the best fix is to start the quest as soon as possible and complete it all at once.
The Forsworn Conspiracy and No One Escapes Cidhna Mine
Notes: ...if you side with the Stormcloaks in the Civil War and if you complete Forsworn Conspiracy before Compelling Tribute and then wait until after Compelling Tribute to start Cidhna Mine, it will become unavailable permanently. It is also possible to have the same effect result from completing Forsworn Conspiracy, then completing Season Unending before Cidhna Mine, even if you have not joined the Stormcloaks.
Dragon Rising
Why: Completing this quest early ensures a large number of Dragon Souls by exploring, if the player is capable of surviving the dragon's attacks.
Why not: After completing this quest, Skyrim will be full of dragons. Deferring it until you're in the mood to fight dragons lets you explore the world in relative peace and allows you to learn Words from Dragon Lairs more easily. Note that starting the quest will not cause dragons to appear; only after killing Mirmulnir will dragons start spawning.
Joining the Stormcloaks or Joining the Legion
Why not: Joining either the Stormcloaks or the Legion removes access to all the opposing faction's camps and causes "random encounter" fights to occur. Capturing towns has been known to break certain quests.
Correct answer by galacticninja on January 14, 2021
I'm not aware of any major problems you can run into.
Most decisions with big results are fairly obvious, in some cases you even get told explicitly that a decision is final (and even then there are occasional "outs" that might help overturn the decision).
But some quests are broken in that finding the item-to-be-tretrieved before getting the quest can prevent you from finishing the quest.
Disclaimer: I don't tend to go on random killing sprees, so I can't speak on the effect of those on sidequests: their quest-givers might not be marked as essential and you could easily lock yourself out of some sidequests by doing that. The people essential to the main quests are essential and you can't kill them anyway.
Answered by Joachim Sauer on January 14, 2021
The only major example of this that I can think of is that there is a segment of the main quest that is skipped if you resolve the Civil War prior to reaching it.
Similarly, your decisions during that chunk of the main quest can allow you to skip some of the more repetitive fort-conquests during the civil war if you play your cards right.
Other than that, and the obvious mutually exclusive choices (Stormcloak/Imperial, Blades/Greybeards), there shouldn't be any other dead ends.
Answered by LessPop_MoreFizz on January 14, 2021
You can choose to kill off the dark brotherhood and not being able to join them. That's the only one I know.
Answered by Jonas B on January 14, 2021
When you do the first Dawnguard quest, Bloodline, you can either side with the vampires and become one yourself, or continue as part of the Dawnguard. If you choose the latter, you learn the Enhanced Dwarven crossbow and exploding dwarven bolts of fire/shock/ice schematics which lets you craft that weapon and bolts if you already have Dwarven smithing. The enhanced Dwarven crossbow is the most powerful ranged weapon in game, and if you become a vampire you can't get access to it (except via console commands).
Edit: The UESP link mentioned in the question says not to finish Bloodline because of Serana. I have infact managed to have both Serana and Lydia follow me - by retaining Serana at the end of Bloodline and simply asking Lydia to follow me as well. You can dismiss Lydia and recruit someone else (for example, if you want to sacrifice a follower for Boethiah's Calling), and Serana will still tag along. At times I've had a full entourage of 6 - Serana, Lydia, a Flame Thrall that I conjured, a vampire bloodhound (if you become a vampire), a dead Restless Draugr reanimated by Serana, and a Frost Atronach conjured by the Draugr!
Answered by Rex on January 14, 2021
Quest order to not miss any quests is:
Do "The man who cried wolf" before reaching level 81 if you don't have the DLC.
Do "Thane of Falkreath", Narfi's "The straw that broke", "Blood on the ice", "Delayed burial", "Spiced whine" before doing joining The Dark Brotherhood.
Do Brand-shei's "Distant Memories" before joining the Thieves Guild.
Do Ahtar's "Kill the bandit leader" before Jaree-ra's "Lights out."
Do "Season Unending" before the Civil war questline.
Do the Dawnguard questline including "Prophet", "New Allegiances" and "The Gift" before becoming a Vampirelord-werewolf hybrid, because a stage 1 hybrid cannot use vampire seduction. Only by becoming a stage 2 hybrid and regaining sun damage can you get seduction again. (Use the search option to see how to become one.)
Answered by Emiel Dijkman on January 14, 2021
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