Oblivion's radiant AI system is mainly remembered for its impeccable, if entirely unintentional, comedic timing, producing non-sequiturs and all over Cyrodiil. Players are currently discovering this all over again in Bethesda's. But one of the system's lesser-known effects is how it also influenced goblin behaviour.
Far from being mindless greenskins, Oblivion's goblins exist in their own tribal ecosystem. The game's seven goblin tribes all carry and cherish their own sacred goblin totem staff, and if that staff is stolen, they'll send out a war party to retrieve it.
Speaking to Eurogamer, Kuhlman revealed how this quest-specific idea became a game-wide system: "Since I was having to set up a scripted system to get the goblins from one dungeon to periodically attack goblins in another, I figured it wouldn't be a lot more work to make this systemic, so that it would work with any goblin tribe if the player stole their totem," he explained. "I'm not sure if the part about 'not a lot more work' was actually true, but it certainly allowed for fun emergent gameplay."
Kuhlman also revealed that part of the reason why the goblin wars system is so distinctive is [[link]] that it relies upon elements of radiant AI's toolset that aren't deployed much elsewhere in Oblivion. "[It] also took advantage of some of the rarely used but powerful AI features such as 'Find', which was how the goblins would head for the totem wherever [[link]] it happened to be," he said.
It also seems like the goblin wars came to Oblivion fairly late. "I would have loved to do more of that kind of thing but we didn't have any extra time—in fact the opposite," Kuhlman pointed out. "And also the tools for doing that kind of thing in Oblivion were very primitive."
And in case you're wondering, yes, the goblin wars in Oblivion Remastered. The game's fancy new engine is built atop the original game logic, so all its weird behaviours are still [[link]] intact. The system is also as unpredictable and easily broken as it was in 2006, but this can apparently be fixed with the original game's.