My partner shares her gaming accounts with her dad, basically because she's had them since she was little. Still, she's the fan of Shitty Todd Howard Games (TM), and having added up the numbers from Playstation, Xbox and Nintendo Switch, she's put something like 7% of all the hours she's been awake in her entire life in the mix of Fallout 3, New Vegas, 4 and 76 and Skyrim. She's never played any of the other Elder Scrolls games and she refuses to turn on mods. She's also never actually bothered to do the end game fight in Skyrim. As far as I can tell, she just restarts the games, makes the same character and then builds that character the same way. She says it's fun. I say she needs some kind of medication.
I mention that she shares her accounts because it is possible that her dad has played those games as well, but I think he mostly plays racing games and bro-grade FPS shooters like Call of Duty and Halo.
I play heavily modded Skyrim and have almost since it came out, I only played it vanilla on an Xbox 360. I loathe vanilla Skyrim with a passion as it's a mile wide and inch deep experience that has no respect for the player or their intelligence. By the time I'm done with it, it's usually a completely different game, mechanics-wise. And even then I don't play it nearly as much as I did as a teenager. I do like that people are
starting to see Todd Howard as a figure akin to Peter Molyneux, but I also think it's far too little far too late and between the Microsoft buyout of Zenimax and the amount of people that do still adore him and his work, Bethesda as it was before is dead.
I enjoy New Vegas very much but I do still need mods to make it not crash. That's it -- that, and adding the sprint and quick-loot systems from Fallout 4, which I believe were the only worthy additions that release made. Other than that, nothing but bugfixes. Nothing to alter the story, the mechanics, the items or the characters. Obsidian made a very good game with Bethesda's toolkit; surprising, considering that iteration also made the dumpster fires that were Fallout 3 and Oblivion.
I love Morrowind, and I don't use mods for anything but
adding content, like the Tamriel Rebuilt project and Skyrim: Home of the Nords. Morrowind is the last game in the series by default that wasn't dumbed down for the average couch potato -- if you couldn't grok the systems, you just weren't going to have a good time. And that's okay. I think more games should be like that. If I don't have to
think to play a game, it's not something I play often.