With just under 5,000 upvotes and an approval rating of 99 percent, u/CNE_Spooders’ clip showcases one of the funniest glitches to be captured in The Elder Scrolls 5: Skyrim in some time. The seconds-long-snippet sees a band of archers float across the sky, stuck in a strange animation as they pass by the player. The clip is made all the funnier by the cries of some nearby NPC soldiers who seem to be every bit as confused as the player.

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Bearing the caption “Skyrim’s native birds are returning. Tamriel is healing,” fans can only roll their eyes and laugh at the nonstop nonsense of the fifth installment of The Elder Scrolls franchise. Oddly enough, this clip pairs pretty well with a strange flying horse glitch that was posted to r/skyrim last month. In addition, it’s not all that dissimilar to another recent viral clip that saw a khajiit swimming through the air toward the player.

Fortunately, while Bethesda’s post-launch patches tend to fix one thing and break another, fan-made mods and updates do a pretty good job of ironing out the game’s most egregious problems. Yet, for some players, coming across oddities such as these are part of the experience and help to make The Elder Scrolls 5: Skyrim the iconic title that it is. Bethesda has also removed or disallowed certain fan-made mods in the past, meaning that players can’t always count on community-generated fixes.

Yet, with The Elder Scrolls 6 currently in development, fans have been left to wonder if the same issues found throughout the previous The Elder Scrolls installment will return in the long-awaited follow-up. Fallout 76 may have undergone many improvements since launch, but when it first debuted, it suffered from many of the same bugs first seen in Fallout 4, and it’s not inconceivable that the next The Elder Scrolls game could suffer similar shortcomings.

Bethesda’s overall attitude toward bugs and glitches could have an impact on Starfield, as well. In late March, a lead designer claimed that the Starfield team was partially inspired by Cyberpunk 2077, and given the litany of issues that game had at launch, it felt like a bit of an unwise comparison.

The Elder Scrolls 5: Skyrim is available now for Nintendo Switch, PC, PS4, and Xbox One.

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