The Elder Scrolls Online Upgrade: Gold Road (DLC) - Compare Prices & Find Best Deals

Compare The Elder Scrolls Online Upgrade: Gold Road (DLC) prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by ZeniMax Online Studios. Published by ZeniMax Online Studios. Released on 6/3/2024. Available on Xbox Series X, Xbox One. Genres: Action, Multiplayer, Third Person, First Person, MMO, RPG.

Gold Road sends ESO into Oblivion's West Weald to close a two-year Daedric arc, and its headline Scribing system hands every class a new toolkit of customizable spells. Solid, but the fetch-quest padding is real.

Gold Road is an Xbox-platform upgrade chapter for The Elder Scrolls Online that lands squarely in familiar MMO-expansion territory: new zone, new story arc, one genuinely interesting mechanical addition, and a side order of busywork that will test your patience. If you know ESO, you know the rhythm. The question is whether this particular spin of that rhythm is worth your time, and the answer is a cautious yes, with some asterisks attached. The story picks up where Necrom left off. A forgotten Daedric Prince named Ithelia, the Prince of Paths, has been unsealed into Nirn after Hermaeus Mora spent an eternity suppressing all memory of her existence. That is a genuinely compelling lore hook, and the West Weald itself is one of the most visually diverse zones ZeniMax has built. Skingrad anchors the map as a dense, sun-drenched hub city, while a forest that literally sprouted overnight bisects the region, shifting the atmosphere from golden Colovian farmland to something far stranger and more overgrown. A blighted wasteland separates those two halves, and the tonal whiplash between them is effective. Oblivion veterans will get a particular kick out of the Ayleid ruins and the Colovian-versus-Bosmer political subplot, which echoes Skyrim's faction tensions without being a direct copy of them. The standout addition is Scribing, the chapter's signature new mechanic. Unlocked via a questline inside the Scholarium, it lets you combine Grimoires with three layered Script types (Focus, Signature, and Affix) to build custom skills across weapon, guild, and soul magic lines. Over 4,000 verified combinations are in the system, and the filters prevent obviously broken or pointless outputs, so the space is navigable rather than overwhelming. You can stack poison damage with a physical damage-over-time effect and wrap the whole thing in a Vulnerability debuff, or build a tank taunt that doubles as a defensive buff. It does not replace your core class kit, but it patches gaps in builds that have existed for years, and build-obsessed players will sink serious hours into the Scholarium altar. The Scribing questline itself, centered on the enigmatic Archmage Ulfsild the Evergreen and her crow companion, is one of the more narratively satisfying mechanical unlock quests in recent ESO memory. Here is where the asterisks come in. The main storyline, while competently written, runs shorter than Necrom's and the pacing stumbles in the back half. Filler quests rear up constantly: running to charge artifacts in distant locations while Leramil the Wise is popping portal shortcuts to everywhere else is the kind of design contradiction that makes a story feel padded on purpose. The Mirrormoor Incursions add open-world group content and keep the zone feeling alive, and the Lucent Citadel trial gives twelve-player groups a proper endgame challenge in the realm of Fargrave. But the quest-loop repetition that critics across the board flagged is a fair complaint, not a niche grievance. If your tolerance for MMO fetch structures is already low, Gold Road will not convert you. One context note for newcomers: Gold Road technically functions as a standalone chapter with a story catch-up, but the emotional payoff requires Necrom. ZeniMax ships a condensed recap, and recurring characters like Leramil and Torvesard do their own reintroductions, but this is the finale of a two-year arc. Starting here is like watching only the second half of a film, workable but not ideal. Long-time ESO subscribers on Xbox will find it a worthwhile chapter with a mechanical system that actually extends build variety past the endgame. Players who skipped Necrom should probably fix that first. Monika, Scout Team

The Elder Scrolls Online Upgrade: Gold Road (DLC)
ActionMultiplayerThird PersonFirst PersonMMORPG

The Elder Scrolls Online Upgrade: Gold Road (DLC)

Jun 3, 2024ZeniMax Online Studios
GamerScout Says

Gold Road sends ESO into Oblivion's West Weald to close a two-year Daedric arc, and its headline Scribing system hands every class a new toolkit of customizable spells. Solid, but the fetch-quest padding is real.

Xbox Series XXbox One
Best Price Available
0.00
at N/A
Historical low: $

Compare Prices(0 stores)

Loading prices...

We may earn a commission when you buy games through links on this page — at no extra cost to you. It never affects our rankings or verdicts.

Screenshots & Media

Screenshot

About The Elder Scrolls Online Upgrade: Gold Road (DLC)

Gold Road is an Xbox-platform upgrade chapter for The Elder Scrolls Online that lands squarely in familiar MMO-expansion territory: new zone, new story arc, one genuinely interesting mechanical addition, and a side order of busywork that will test your patience. If you know ESO, you know the rhythm. The question is whether this particular spin of that rhythm is worth your time, and the answer is a cautious yes, with some asterisks attached. The story picks up where Necrom left off. A forgotten Daedric Prince named Ithelia, the Prince of Paths, has been unsealed into Nirn after Hermaeus Mora spent an eternity suppressing all memory of her existence. That is a genuinely compelling lore hook, and the West Weald itself is one of the most visually diverse zones ZeniMax has built. Skingrad anchors the map as a dense, sun-drenched hub city, while a forest that literally sprouted overnight bisects the region, shifting the atmosphere from golden Colovian farmland to something far stranger and more overgrown. A blighted wasteland separates those two halves, and the tonal whiplash between them is effective. Oblivion veterans will get a particular kick out of the Ayleid ruins and the Colovian-versus-Bosmer political subplot, which echoes Skyrim's faction tensions without being a direct copy of them. The standout addition is Scribing, the chapter's signature new mechanic. Unlocked via a questline inside the Scholarium, it lets you combine Grimoires with three layered Script types (Focus, Signature, and Affix) to build custom skills across weapon, guild, and soul magic lines. Over 4,000 verified combinations are in the system, and the filters prevent obviously broken or pointless outputs, so the space is navigable rather than overwhelming. You can stack poison damage with a physical damage-over-time effect and wrap the whole thing in a Vulnerability debuff, or build a tank taunt that doubles as a defensive buff. It does not replace your core class kit, but it patches gaps in builds that have existed for years, and build-obsessed players will sink serious hours into the Scholarium altar. The Scribing questline itself, centered on the enigmatic Archmage Ulfsild the Evergreen and her crow companion, is one of the more narratively satisfying mechanical unlock quests in recent ESO memory. Here is where the asterisks come in. The main storyline, while competently written, runs shorter than Necrom's and the pacing stumbles in the back half. Filler quests rear up constantly: running to charge artifacts in distant locations while Leramil the Wise is popping portal shortcuts to everywhere else is the kind of design contradiction that makes a story feel padded on purpose. The Mirrormoor Incursions add open-world group content and keep the zone feeling alive, and the Lucent Citadel trial gives twelve-player groups a proper endgame challenge in the realm of Fargrave. But the quest-loop repetition that critics across the board flagged is a fair complaint, not a niche grievance. If your tolerance for MMO fetch structures is already low, Gold Road will not convert you. One context note for newcomers: Gold Road technically functions as a standalone chapter with a story catch-up, but the emotional payoff requires Necrom. ZeniMax ships a condensed recap, and recurring characters like Leramil and Torvesard do their own reintroductions, but this is the finale of a two-year arc. Starting here is like watching only the second half of a film, workable but not ideal. Long-time ESO subscribers on Xbox will find it a worthwhile chapter with a mechanical system that actually extends build variety past the endgame. Players who skipped Necrom should probably fix that first. Monika, Scout Team

Tags

xboxScribing SystemBuild CustomizationDaedric LoreOpen-World Incursions12-Player TrialStory Chapter DLCNecrom RequiredSpell CraftingFaction Politics

System Requirements

System requirements for The Elder Scrolls Online Upgrade: Gold Road (DLC) aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
ZeniMax Online Studios
Publisher
ZeniMax Online Studios
Release Date
Jun 3, 2024

Price Alert

Get notified when the price drops below your target!

Create Alert