Close Menu
  • Gaming
    • Game Guides
    • Codes
    • Game News
    • Game Previews
    • Game Reviews
    • Game Features
    • Game Lists
    • Platforms
      • Nintendo
      • PC
      • PlayStation
      • Xbox
      • Mobile
  • Entertainment
    • Movies
    • Movie Features
    • Movie Reviews
    • TV
    • Reality TV
    • Royals
  • Celebrity
  • Human Interest
  • Astrology
  • Videos
  • More
    • Anime
    • Lists
    • Podcasts
    • Reviews
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn YouTube
  • About Us
  • Join Our Team
  • Meet the Team
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Sitemap
  • Editorial Guidelines
  • Advertising Policy
The Nerd Stash
  • Gaming
  • Celebrity
  • Human Interest
  • Videos
The Nerd Stash
Home»Game Features»Starfield Breaks The 40-Second Rule

Starfield Breaks The 40-Second Rule

The 40-Second Rule keeps players from getting bored. Starfield breaks that rule constantly. But does that mean Bethesda’s new RPG is boring?

Patrick ArmstrongBy Patrick ArmstrongSeptember 20, 20234 Mins Read
The player approaches a twisted tree in Starfield
Image Source: Bethesda via The Nerd Stash

Skip To...

  • How Starfield Breaks The 40-Second Rule
  • Breaking The 40-Second Rule Hurts Starfield
  • Will TES 6 Follow The Rule?
This article is over 1 years old and may contain outdated information.

When developing The Witcher 3, CD Projekt Red followed the 40-Second Rule: there should be something to catch the player’s interest every 40 seconds. Hidden treasures, monster nests, and abandoned ruins litter The Witcher 3’s map. Getting from one interesting place to another never takes long. Not every open-world game obeys this rule, but many of the most successful ones do. Previous Bethesda games such as Skyrim and Oblivion more or less followed it, but sci-fi epic Starfield breaks it. Doing so has important consequences for players. Here’s everything you need to know about what breaking the rule means for Starfield.

How Starfield Breaks The 40-Second Rule

A snowy forest in Starfield, a game that doesn't follow the 40-Second Rule
Image Source: Bethesda via The Nerd Stash

Though Starfield breaks the 40-Second Rule, it doesn’t do so everywhere or for no reason. Content fills handcrafted social hubs such as cities and space stations. In those locations, the player rarely goes 20 seconds without encountering something new, never mind 40. New Atlantis, Neon, the Key, and other major areas provide players with a ton of optional activities, including shopping, chatting with NPCs, buying new spaceships, and picking up quests. As long as you remain in that kind of location, Starfield feels dense, brisk, and engaging. The trouble only starts when you leave.

The two main offenders are space and the procedurally generated landing sites scattered across every planet and moon. It’s easy to defend space’s violation of the 40-Second Rule in Starfield. After all, space is so incomprehensibly big that the notion of filling it with bite-sized content every minute or so is laughable. Use your Grav Drive to warp to a new star system, and you might be greeted with a pirate attack, distress signal, or security scan. Once that random encounter is dealt with, there’s nothing else to do. In Starfield, space is an excuse to get into some dogfights and admire your ship in motion, so it’s not surprising that there’s not much else happening there.

Breaking The 40-Second Rule Hurts Starfield

The entrance to a cave in Bethesda's new sci-fi RPG
Image Source: Bethesda via The Nerd Stash

Disembark at one of the game’s innumerable landing sites and activate your scanner to reveal nearby Points of Interest. These include friendly NPC camps, anomalies, pirate hideouts, mining facilities, caves, and other dungeons. Every landing site has several of these POIs, chosen from a collection handcrafted by the developer and then randomly distributed by the game. Unlike Skyrim, the player has no horse to carry them, and you can’t fast-travel to these locations. There’s no choice but to run. Even if the player runs the entire time and uses Personal Atmosphere to boost their O2 efficiency, it takes a long time to reach these POIs. Each location can be anywhere from 2-5 minutes away, far more than the recommended 40 seconds.

Going three or four minutes without seeing or doing something new hurts the game. In Skyrim, a new bandit hideout, shrine, or secret was around every corner. Red Dead Redemption 2, which breaks the 40-second rule from time to time, at least offered players stunning, handcrafted vistas to enjoy while they traveled. Starfield is a beautiful game, but procedural generation causes its landing sites to all feel similar. Sprinting or bunny-hopping around empty moons gets old. By the time the player arrives at their destination, the damage has been done. Maybe you’ll kill some pirates and loot some cool gear, but the long wait likely leeched away some of your initial enthusiasm.

Will TES 6 Follow The Rule?

An NPC at their camp in Bethesda's new sci-fi RPG
Image Source: Bethesda via The Nerd Stash

Given what we know about Starfield, should we be worried that TES 6 will make the same mistakes? In short, no. It’s likely that TES 6 will follow in the footsteps of Skyrim rather than Starfield. The reason is simple. Given the current limits of technology, developers can’t fill 1,000 worlds with an endless stream of handcrafted content. Populating a single world with such content is not only possible, but also what Bethesda has done for previous games in the Elder Scrolls series. Starfield stretched the development team thin, whereas TES 6 with its far smaller scope will make content density much easier to achieve. Starfield suffers from breaking the 40-Second Rule, but Bethesda fans can rest easy. TES 6 is still in good hands.

Starfield is available for PC and Xbox Series X/S.

Related Topics
Bethesda Starfield
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Reddit Email
Patrick Armstrong
  • Website

Artist and writer with a lifelong love of video games. Their favorite games include Dead by Daylight, Meet Your Maker, and Project Zomboid.

SUGGESTED READS

Rematch Xbox Game Pass Launch
Game Features

One Of the Most Unique Soccer Experiences of This Year Is Available on Xbox Game Pass

Stellar Blade PC Version Review
9
Game Reviews

Stellar Blade Review – My Dress-Up Darling

Rune Factory Guardians of Azuma
8
Game Reviews

Rune Factory: Guardians of Azuma Review – Saving the World With Dance and Gardening

Stellar Blade north korea Steam user
Game News

Gamers Suspect Kim Jong Un is Playing Stellar Blade After Lone North Korean Steam User Comes Back Online: ‘Welcome Back Kim!’

Yakuza 0 Director's Cut Nintendo Switch 2 Review
8
Features

Yakuza 0: Director’s Cut Review – A Masterpiece Reborn

Final Fantasy Composer Feared Square Enix Would Collapse After Creator's Exit: 'I Shouldn't Stay Here, I Thought'
Game News

Final Fantasy Composer Feared Square Enix Would Collapse After Creator’s Exit: ‘I Shouldn’t Stay Here, I Thought’

Trending

Texas Judge Order Man’s Removal From Courtroom Because ‘We’re Not Going To Be Called Racists’

Calfornia woman abused by caregiver

Disabled California Woman Berated By Caregiver As Family Shares Horrifying Videos: ‘You Look Like A Pig’

A picture of the North Carolina protesters.

Silver-Haired No-Kings Protesters in North Carolina Catch Heat Over Their Age: ‘Paid Protesters’

A picture of the Colorado agitator.

Armed Republican Agitator Reaches for Gun at Colorado Protest and Immediately Regrets It: ‘Looking to Be a MAGA Hero’

The Nerd Stash
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
  • About Us
  • Join Our Team
  • Meet the Team
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA Policy
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of Use
  • Sitemap
  • Editorial Guidelines
  • Advertising Policy
© 2025 The Nerd Stash. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.