Compare The Elder Scrolls Online - Explorer's Pack (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by ZeniMax Online Studios. Published by Bethesda Softworks. Released on 5/22/2017. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Adventure, Massively Multiplayer, RPG. Metacritic score: 80/100.

ESO's Explorer's Pack unlocks cross-alliance character creation, a starter pet, and bonus treasure maps. Thin on content, but useful if alliance restrictions were blocking your build.

The Elder Scrolls Online is a sprawling massively multiplayer RPG set across the continent of Tamriel, and by the time most players hit it they already have a specific race and faction combination in mind that the base game quietly locks behind a paywall. That is exactly the problem this DLC pack exists to solve. The Explorer's Pack grants any-alliance access, meaning you can roll a Nord in the Aldmeri Dominion or a Khajiit fighting for the Ebonheart Pact without the game slapping your wrist. For players who care about roleplaying a specific character concept, that freedom is genuinely meaningful. For everyone else, this is a very small box. Let's be honest about what is actually in the pack beyond that alliance unlock. You get a single exclusive vanity pet and a set of bonus treasure maps scattered across various zones. The treasure maps are a nice early-game nudge toward exploration and yield some modest loot, but they are a one-time consumable reward, not a repeatable system. The pet is cosmetic. Neither adds hours of gameplay. If you were hoping for new quests, story content, new zones, or combat mechanics, this is not that. ESO has plenty of proper expansions (Morrowind, Summerset, Greymoor, and others) that deliver narrative weight and build-defining skill lines. This pack sits firmly in the accessories drawer. Where the Explorer's Pack does earn its keep is in the context of ESO's actual strength as an RPG. The base game and its expansions offer surprisingly good zone storytelling, decent faction questlines, and a flexible class-plus-weapon build system that holds up well past the first thirty hours. Removing the alliance restriction means you can theory-craft your character from day one without compromise, which matters more in ESO than in a single-player game because your choice affects which starting zones and faction quests you experience first. That said, ESO's infamous padding problem and its cash-shop economy mean you should go in with clear expectations: the Explorer's Pack is infrastructure, not adventure. The Steam review score sits at 81 percent positive across a massive sample of nearly 160,000 reviews, which reflects sentiment toward the whole ESO package rather than this specific DLC. Metacritic lands at 80. Neither number tells you much about whether to grab this particular add-on. What it does confirm is that the underlying game has a genuinely large and mostly satisfied player base, which matters for an MMO where co-op and PvP content requires live populations. If you are already invested in ESO and the alliance lock was genuinely frustrating you, this pack resolves that friction cleanly. If you are new and wondering whether this is the right first purchase alongside the base game, the answer is: maybe, but prioritize a proper expansion first. Monika, Scout Team

The Elder Scrolls Online - Explorer's Pack (DLC)
ActionAdventureMassively MultiplayerRPG

The Elder Scrolls Online - Explorer's Pack (DLC)

May 22, 2017ZeniMax Online StudiosBethesda Softworks
GamerScout Says

ESO's Explorer's Pack unlocks cross-alliance character creation, a starter pet, and bonus treasure maps. Thin on content, but useful if alliance restrictions were blocking your build.

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About The Elder Scrolls Online - Explorer's Pack (DLC)

The Elder Scrolls Online is a sprawling massively multiplayer RPG set across the continent of Tamriel, and by the time most players hit it they already have a specific race and faction combination in mind that the base game quietly locks behind a paywall. That is exactly the problem this DLC pack exists to solve. The Explorer's Pack grants any-alliance access, meaning you can roll a Nord in the Aldmeri Dominion or a Khajiit fighting for the Ebonheart Pact without the game slapping your wrist. For players who care about roleplaying a specific character concept, that freedom is genuinely meaningful. For everyone else, this is a very small box. Let's be honest about what is actually in the pack beyond that alliance unlock. You get a single exclusive vanity pet and a set of bonus treasure maps scattered across various zones. The treasure maps are a nice early-game nudge toward exploration and yield some modest loot, but they are a one-time consumable reward, not a repeatable system. The pet is cosmetic. Neither adds hours of gameplay. If you were hoping for new quests, story content, new zones, or combat mechanics, this is not that. ESO has plenty of proper expansions (Morrowind, Summerset, Greymoor, and others) that deliver narrative weight and build-defining skill lines. This pack sits firmly in the accessories drawer. Where the Explorer's Pack does earn its keep is in the context of ESO's actual strength as an RPG. The base game and its expansions offer surprisingly good zone storytelling, decent faction questlines, and a flexible class-plus-weapon build system that holds up well past the first thirty hours. Removing the alliance restriction means you can theory-craft your character from day one without compromise, which matters more in ESO than in a single-player game because your choice affects which starting zones and faction quests you experience first. That said, ESO's infamous padding problem and its cash-shop economy mean you should go in with clear expectations: the Explorer's Pack is infrastructure, not adventure. The Steam review score sits at 81 percent positive across a massive sample of nearly 160,000 reviews, which reflects sentiment toward the whole ESO package rather than this specific DLC. Metacritic lands at 80. Neither number tells you much about whether to grab this particular add-on. What it does confirm is that the underlying game has a genuinely large and mostly satisfied player base, which matters for an MMO where co-op and PvP content requires live populations. If you are already invested in ESO and the alliance lock was genuinely frustrating you, this pack resolves that friction cleanly. If you are new and wondering whether this is the right first purchase alongside the base game, the answer is: maybe, but prioritize a proper expansion first. Monika, Scout Team

Tags

Multi-playerMMOPvPOnline PvPCo-opOnline Co-opSteam Trading CardsCaptions availableIn-App PurchasesCamera ComfortChat Text-to-speechCustom Volume ControlsPlayable without Timed InputStereo SoundSurround SoundPartial Controller SupportHDR availableFamily SharingAlliance UnlockCharacter CustomizationCosmetic DLCStarter BundleTreasure MapsBuild FreedomFaction Choice

System Requirements

System requirements for The Elder Scrolls Online - Explorer's Pack (DLC) aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
80
Steam
81%(159,897)

Game Info

Developer
ZeniMax Online Studios
Publisher
Bethesda Softworks
Release Date
May 22, 2017

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