Earlier this year, Bethesda Game Studios briefly captured the interest of many gamers with the mystery surrounding the remaster of The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion. Rumors had swirled for months about it, but they did not confirm anything until the announcement and immediate release of Oblivion Remastered on April 22, 2025.
It was a veritable 'shadowdrop', an unusual marketing strategy where the developer and publisher do not market their product in advance but instead focus entirely on maximizing the surprise effect. Speaking to Gamesradar during the recent Golden Joystick Awards, Bethesda Game Studios Director Tom Mustaine, who was in charge of the Oblivion remaster project as Director of External Projects (Virtuos handled the game's Unreal Engine 5 port), mentioned the previous shadowdrop of Tango Gameworks' Hi-Fi Rush as a successful test run and suggested the studio would like to do more.
We had a real successful shadowdrop with Hi-Fi Rush through Xbox and through Bethesda. Todd Howard, the boss man, he's wanted to shadowdrop things for a long time because it's so great to be able to say, 'Here's the thing, get it today.' It's very valuable.
We all have short attention spans now. There's Grand Theft Auto, for example. I want that today, right? So it is an interesting strategy… I don't have any ideas of what would be next, but I hope it's not the last. Personally, I think it was great to own the internet for that day and, you know, give people exactly what they want the moment we talk about it. I'm a fan of that personally, but I'd love to see more people do it.
Indeed, the penchant of Bethesda Game Studios boss Todd Howard for shadowdrops is well known. Just recently, he commented that he'd love for the studio's next highly anticipated game, The Elder Scrolls VI, to 'just appear' eventually once it is ready to ship to fans.
It seems unlikely Microsoft would agree to let them do this to such a massively anticipated title, sequel to one of the best-selling games of all time, The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim. Going with a more traditional marketing campaign would be the safest route, although perhaps a middle ground could be a Fallout 4-style reveal at E3 (now Summer Game Fest) and subsequent release in November.
A game that could be shadowdropped by Bethesda, similar to Oblivion Remastered, is the Fallout 3 remaster. According to rumors, it's in development alongside a remaster of Fallout: New Vegas.
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