Starfieldâs updates have been sporadic and underwhelming since it arrived over seven months ago. Itâs clear the team at Bethesda has been diligently fixing bugs and adding small improvements, but it doesnât feel like the open-world RPG has gotten the same amount of post-launch love as some of its peers. Director Todd Howard recently hinted that could be changing in the near future.
The nod came during an interview about the new Fallout TV show. IGN asked if the post-apocalyptic shooter franchiseâs recent spike in popularity meant Bethesda might prioritize Fallout 5 over The Elder Scrolls VI. Howard said the studio wasnât planning on changing up the batting order, while also reiterating that it currently has a lot on its plate.
âWeâre still doing a lot of work, obviously on Fallout 76, and we see the community, so many people going into that game and kind of rediscovering it and just so happy with where that game is at,â Howard said. âIt really does, and I mean, this has one of the best communities in all of gaming. Surprisingly, itâs a very, very nice apocalypse, and weâre doing a lot of Starfield work as well. So we have some really good updates that are going to get announced soon for that game. So, a lot going on here.â
Read More: Kotakuâs Starfield Review
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Those âreally good updatesâ might include features Bethesda previously teased in an end-of-year blog post last December like city maps, new ship building options, and ânew ways to travel.â The development team also said mod support via the âcreation kitâ and settings for customizing things like carry capacity and ship damage are also coming in the future. And then thereâs Shattered Space, the Starfield expansion thatâs expected to add new story content.

Iâve barely thought about Starfield since I finished it last fall. Should that feel surprising? Itâs hardly a live-service game that needs to keep juicing player engagement with new content and updates. And it wasnât busted at launch like Cyberpunk 2077 was. Still, I keep finding myself wishing some big gameplay twist or new addition would pull me back into its planet-hopping sprawl where most of my characterâs business was left unfinished.
Despite roughly three major patches since Starfield came out last September, most of the changes to the game have dealt specifically with fixing bugs or improving graphics and presentation. As Forbesâ Paul Tassi pointed out last month, it would have been a stretch to call many of the changes true quality-of-life improvements. Being able to now eat food directly off tables remains one of the few major gameplay changes. Thereâs a lot more potential to be mined.
Itâs hard not to compare Starfield to Baldurâs Gate 3 in this regard. Launched around the same time, Larian Studiosâ D&D-based RPG has tweaked endings, added new modes, expanded epilogue scenes, and introduced a litany of other changes that alter how players interact with the gameâs characters and its world. Just today, Larian announced new endings are in the works for its next big patch. My intent here isnât to pit these two games against each other, just to underline the type of future I still want for Starfield. It doesnât need to become an all-time classic like Skyrim to have a foundation thatâs still worth building on for the millions of players that will shuffle through its cosmic wilderness in the years to come.
Maybe Iâm grading on an unfair curve here. It took a long time for Skyrim and Fallout 4 to begin receiving meaningful gameplay changes after launch as well. But the energy around Starfield has felt especially muted in recent months, especially as Fallout is thrust into the limelight. Itâs not lost on me that Howard only mentioned Starfield briefly after lingering on Fallout 76âs slow-burn live service revival, as if it, too, is now in the rear-view mirror. I hope it doesnât stay that way.