The Elder Scrolls

If it's any consolation, elder scrolls 6 isn't quite the end of elder scrolls that you think it is. There is still skywind and skyblivion. Remakes of old games, yeah, but I still have faith they will be good. And if the beyond skyrim project turns out to be good, that means more decent elder scrolls content.

After that, who knows. But yeah, things aren't as bad as you think they are.
 
As for Ulfric, he's a politician as well as a warlord. He's more pragmatic than the memes and his reputation would have you believe. He wants Skyrim to be free to worship Talos and/or follow the "old ways", not impose it upon all of Skyrim. He only opposes foreigners insofar as they cause problems for the Nord majority.
Some say Ulfric and the Stormcloaks are "racist" but as far as the world of Elder Scrolls is concerned, in the realm of xenophobia he is a moderate at most.
 
Some say Ulfric and the Stormcloaks are "racist" but as far as the world of Elder Scrolls is concerned, in the realm of xenophobia he is a moderate at most.
I wish the Giants were developed more. They're essentially Atmorans that didn't become manlets like the proto-Nords. Some of the Tamriel Rebuilt artwork for Atmorans/Giants is kino (prob never ever until I'm 60 I'll see them). Roscrea is still ruled by an Atmoran King who funds Polar Expeditions into Atmora where time is literally frozen there requiring enslaved Atronachs to "burn away" frozen Anuic states of being with Padomaic chaos. Joornarnernaus Of Atmora is the current King of Roscrea in their current PTR iteration. https://wiki.project-tamriel.com/wiki/Atmora
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The lore was less fleshed out back in 2002, and Dunmer are the focal point of Morrowind. It's not about the Nords, so we don't see as much.

Plus, a Nord that's outside of Skyrim is probably more tolerant of other races. Sven the Sailor in Morrowind has learned to trade and interact with non-Nords; Bjorg the Bumpkin of 4E Skyrim has only experienced the foreigners barging in and demanding he change his way of life.
80% of the lore we have (if you dont count ESO which I dont want to) is from Daggerfall and Morrowind, and Morrowind was the last time the lore was consistent. The fleshing out of Oblivion and Skyrim has introduced a ton of lore inconsistencies (not in universe inconsistencies like biased characters). I dont think the Nords are as racist as people make them out to be on Reddit. I think the "racist angle" was introduced to make the Stormcloaks not the oblivious moral good guys. I just don't think that the way they did the "racism" fits the character of the Nords that we have seen in every previous title.
I already mentioned that. Those old folk beliefs would be expressed in more animistic ways, without shrines or priests or temples.
Yes but we dont see things like household shrines or shamans. If we look into Varieties of Faith we find talking about Shor: "Considered a "dead god," Shor has no priesthood and is not actively worshiped, but he is frequently sworn by." What this suggests is that the other gods do have active priesthoods and Shor is the exception to the rule. If they don't have a concept of temples and priests, why did they the ancient nords build giant temples to them, Sure you can say the dragon's made them do it, but why do they then have form a order of monks, build a monastery hundreds of years after the end of the Dragon Cult on a holy site significant to the Nord belief system. Did Paarthurnax tell them to do it? So the Nords didn't build temples or monuments or have holy men until the imperial cult took over in the last 200 years? An internal document for Skyrim by Kirkbride says "The Hearth Gods have temples appropriate to their nature: Kyne's are built on peaks, Mara's are the halls of important Witches, Dibella's are the halls of important Wives– the temples aren't like those of the Imperials; as Hearth Gods, they are always homes to someone, and the highest-ranking female of that home is their de facto high priestess." and "The Eight Divines are viewed by the Nords as a “Southern” import. They retain some of the taint of the Alessian Order, and are basically viewed as a religion for foreigners. Their gods are fine for them, but Nords need Nord gods."
They explicitly invoke Ysmir, Shor, and Kyne when giving the Dragonborn the formal greeting.
Yes but this is a historical quote and when you talk to them they only ever use Imperial Cult names and ideas. When you talk to Greybeard's they mention that you have the gift of Akatosh where as they are followers of Kynareth and that is why they have to be pacifists and you can fight for Skyrim and Nirn . This makes zero sense if they follow the old ways at all since Akatosh is Alduin. Kyne is the Mother of Man, she is Skyrim itself but they can't protect Skyrim and her people because of ?, but you can because you have the evil blood of the evil god that you are fighting and wants to destroy the world?

The Idea of The dragonborn being linked to the Voice is a Skyrim thing apart from maybe a single very vague line by Mankar Camoran in Oblivion. The Voice was always a Kyne thing. Kyne is the god of wind, she breathed man into existence. What is a man's voice but shaping wind and breath into sounds that can alter the world. They believe that their breath is the breath of Kyne.

Do they mention any of this? No. they mention kyne 2 times and the voice being her gift once in a historical quote that seems to go completely against what they actually believe when you ask them.
The Monomyth generally agrees that Lorkhan is dead, and the world/the moons are the remains of his body. Why worship a deceased god that no longer has power?

As for Ulfric, he's a politician as well as a warlord. He's more pragmatic than the memes and his reputation would have you believe. He wants Skyrim to be free to worship Talos and/or follow the "old ways", not impose it upon all of Skyrim. He only opposes foreigners insofar as they cause problems for the Nord majority.
Im not saying that he should be actively praying to Shor, but he never references any of the old gods once, not even Shor who is a perfect metaphor for how the Thalmor are attacking humanity. It would be like if a Christian country sold all of their firearms to mass buy tractors and not a single person made an news article or quip about "turning swords into ploughshares". We have no evidence of Ulfric ever even thinking about the old gods, the only one he ever mentions by name is Alduin but that's because he is the big bad.


Sorry for the absolute war and peace posts, brevity is not one of my strong suits
 
Some say Ulfric and the Stormcloaks are "racist" but as far as the world of Elder Scrolls is concerned, in the realm of xenophobia he is a moderate at most.
The reason for that is because Nords are based on White people and White "racism" is the ultimate act of evil in leftist morality. Skyrim was also released when the internet (that leftists held more or less a monopoly over) was becoming mainstream and race relations were "starting" to decline in the US with the Trayvon Martin shooting and rise of BLM.
 
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The reason for that is because Nords are based on White people and White "racism" is the ultimate act of evil in leftist morality. Skyrim was also released when the internet (that leftists held more or less a monopoly over) was becoming mainstream and race relations were "starting" to decline in the US with the Trayvon Martin shooting and rise of BLM.
I think it was a poor attempt to try and make the civil war more morally grey and to make it harder to chose a side. The first thing a new player sees is the Imperials trying to chop your head off because they cant be bothered to amend a list they made. The Imperials turn a blind eye to the Altmer gestapo kidnapping and torturing people for practicing their own religion, they belittle Nord culture and people naturally tend to side with the rebellious underdog. Apart from the imperials being the good guys of Oblivion and the Romaboo aesthetic (which varies from person to person) the only thing they have going for them is "we are the best long term solution for the Dominion problem" which is highly debatable anyway.
 
I think it was a poor attempt to try and make the civil war more morally grey and to make it harder to chose a side. The first thing a new player sees is the Imperials trying to chop your head off because they cant be bothered to amend a list they made. The Imperials turn a blind eye to the Altmer gestapo kidnapping and torturing people for practicing their own religion, they belittle Nord culture and people naturally tend to side with the rebellious underdog. Apart from the imperials being the good guys of Oblivion and the Romaboo aesthetic (which varies from person to person) the only thing they have going for them is "we are the best long term solution for the Dominion problem" which is highly debatable anyway.
The avatar of Talos in Morrowind says the Empire is gonna finally down in a few years, for worse or better.
One of the high-mages in Tribunal says about the gates to Oblivion gonna appear in the Mundus.
The Emperor is killed. The empire struggles after it and we see the consequences in Skyrim.

Is very directly and rethorical. If you aren't a Imperial or Breton, why join them?
 
I started Oblivion last night, and man, it is just as hilariously broken as I had heard. I maxed out my Sneaking by wedging something between the sticks of my controller while I was in the tutorial in the intro dungeon and going to bed, waking up to 100 Sneaking.

Whoever came up with the levelling system in that game needed another year to make it somewhat sane.
 
I started Oblivion last night, and man, it is just as hilariously broken as I had heard. I maxed out my Sneaking by wedging something between the sticks of my controller while I was in the tutorial in the intro dungeon and going to bed, waking up to 100 Sneaking.

Whoever came up with the levelling system in that game needed another year to make it somewhat sane.
I got the Skeleton Key from Nocturnal's quest and skyrocketed my Security skill spamming Force Attempt.
 
Well, as mentioned in another thread, I began a playthrough of Daggerfall, and I've since completed it. I quite enjoyed it for the most part. The only time I didn't like what was going on before the final dungeon was when a random dungeon started with a big drop into a body of water, necessitating a lengthy climbing attempt in order to leave once I was finished with my business there. Heck, one time such a dungeon managed to soft-lock me. Thankfully, I had been saving like it's a Point-and-Click adventure, so simply reloading to before I took that quest was no big deal.

However, the final dungeon can go fuck itself. I know a lot of people give Xen from Half Life a lot of shit, but honestly, it has NOTHING on The Mantellan Crux. With a confusing layout, combined with moon-logic puzzles that don't explain themselves, combined with numerous opportunities to softlock due to the statues that cast levitate on you being single-use only, it is by far the worst part of the game. Heck, I was even experiencing some kind of bug during the fire room with the Blind God, as for some reason, despite following a walkthrough to the letter, I was being barred off from the skull in the middle by forcefields. Turns out, the skulls were being triggered by me walking underneath them, rather than interacting with them, as after many, many reloads, I started crouching underneath the skulls I didn't want to touch, and it worked.

The frustrations didn't end there, as then I came to the part where the map is built like a crossbow. I watched a video of some guy showing how to do it without magic, and he somehow climbs up and goes sideways, which I seem to be completely unable to do. Thank fuck I happened across two Levitate Potions during my playthrough, because otherwise that would've been GG.

Overall, I'd say it's a very solid experience until the final part of the game. Heck, I even took several screenshots of the scenery, as I found it quite picturesque despite being a 2.5D game. I can understand why they took out climbing in the later games, but dicking around in Sentinel while I was waiting for the Underking's Agent to contact me was a lot of fun, as it felt like a precursor to modern action games where you can climb on every surface (Breath of the Wild, Crimson Desert, etc.). I might play through it again at some point with some more mods to help spice things up as well.

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