So something more subtle than all the assassinations that the Telvanni had you carry out?SajuukKhar said:Actually High Rock is more "game of thrones" political assassination, then House Televani wizardy.MBurdock said:High Rock. The more mages, the more it will be outlandish like House Telvanni, hopefully.
Yes, much more so.MBurdock said:So something more subtle than all the assassinations that the Telvanni had you carry out?
I think there are lots of different stakes that could motivate the whole continent. Anything that threatens the political stability of the Empire could be one. Economic concerns or religious conflicts could do. Ideological conflicts. Any local problem with wider implications. Anything, really. And I would be fine with a plot where the stakes are particular to the area the game takes place in or even to smaller groups or a few individuals.SajuukKhar said:What stakes are really large enough to matter to the 10 races besides end of the world scenarios?
Really? Because from the tone of things in Skyrim, the Dominion has the Empire bent over a barrel and it's reaching for the lube. Like I thought the entire purpose behind the civil war was because Stormcloak didn't think the Empire should be bowing to the Dominion, and specifically that the Nords shouldn't be bowing to anybody but a High King...which is why the Empire wants to crush Stormcloak's rebellion, so the Dominion wouldn't get pissed off and invade again.SajuukKhar said:The Elves have no chance of winning, but I would love to see them epically fail.
I like this idea. Honestly though after Skyrim, I doubt they'll have any trouble developing a different area of Cyrodiil. They get better at their world designs with every game.Scrustle said:I've always wanted to see Summerset Isle. Valenwood and High Rock would be pretty cool as well I suppose. Elsweyr could be interesting, but I don't think it could hold a whole game. Not enough variation.
I know something happens in Tamriel that isn't an apocalypse lol.SajuukKhar said:Considering that
-The Empire was founded by Lorkhan
-Mortal belief affects the gods very existences
Pretty much every single thing that happens to the Empire is gonna piss Lorkhan off and he is gonna make it into a big deal by sending a god-killer down to Nirn to fix the problem.
It is kinda hard to not turn everything into a world ending scenario when the very basis of the series meta-physics states that what mortals beleive can alter the very landscape of the world, and the gods.