"dragons were never gone, they were just hiding...and very very sneaky"
elder scrolls lore operates on an unreliable narrator principle. most players think dragons were extinct or extremely rare because all the nords in tes:v say so. but most people by the time of skyrim don't know anything about dragons or real history, and nords are well known for embellishing or over romanticising their own history to begin with.
just apply it to the real world for context; would you really believe some backwater, overly patriotic normal person on his country's history? because that's what many nords are in the context of tes:v skyrim, people who don't really understand history, but really want to pretend their race and country is better than it is. it makes sense they would twist history to make it seem like the ancient nords wiped out 99% of all dragons in a place of a lack of information
bit of a long ramble i could have structured better, but hopefully you get my meaning
Another "I don't know about the lore, but I'm going to say that this is lore-breaking" thread.
https://www.imperial-library.info/content/atlas-dragons
https://www.imperial-library.info/content/there-be-dragons
https://www.imperial-library.info/content/dragon-war
"The last known sighting of a dragon in Tamriel was in the time of Tiber Septim."
I highly doubt that literally every person in the Dragonguard was a Dragonborn or a Thu'um user. Dragons can die, but they can be resurrected if they were to die if there is no Dragonborn because the Dragonborn doesn't just kill the body, they steal the soul as well.
I mean, it was explicitly stated that the Dragonborn was the only one who can permanently kill them, meaning that they can be temporarily killed at the cost of them being resurrected by another dragon later. I highly doubt this is a "large scale dragon war" especially since the Dragonguard has slain many nameless dragons long after the Dragon War.
Aristocles22 wrote: »Lore is still important, even in a series with a large number of cop-outs and loopholes built into it like TES (dragon breaks, transcription errors, etc). Breaking lore breaks immersion, and while lore has to serve the gameplay, the gameplay has to serve lore by not breaking it. It's a symbiotic relationship.
Now, does this break lore? Sort of. It is a return of dragons before Alduin's return, but there were already dragons in the world before he came back from being banished by the ancient Nordic heroes. I suppose its not so much a lore break as it is underwhelming. Alduin was supposed to herald the long-prophesied return of the dragons... who already returned once before he did. If Alduin's return was like Christopher Columbus, this wave of dragons is like Leif Erikson. It happened, but it didn't really make that big of a difference. Plus, dragons were always a part of Nordic lore in TES, associated with the frozen north. Throwing them into a desert, the exact opposite of Skyrim's climate, just seems off.
LickingHistSap wrote: »Dragon's didn't go extinct until the 3rd Era, man. A direct quote from a Skyrim Lorebook:
"The last known sighting of a dragon in Tamriel was in the time of Tiber Septim… It seems the last few vanished all at once.", meaning dragons were still around until the early Third Era.
Even then there were exceptions. Skyrim itself gives us one, with a Dunmer having met with and recorded a conversation with a living dragon who was on Vvardenfell just after the Red Year, and there was at least one other Dragon alive and allied with the city of Daggerfall in the Third Era during the war of Betony. And now thanks to Blades, there are even more survivors.
The last Dragonguard Dragon hunt we have on record is from 2e300, just 200 years prior to ESO. There is no lore contradiction with 7 dragons being active right now in the mid Second Era.
Dragons were around in the 1st Era and before. In that time, they ruled over Tamriel, uncontested by mortals, who had no voice. Under the rule of Alduin and the dragon priests, mortals suffered and Kynareth took pity. She granted mortals a voice too and shared the Thu'um with many of them. In the great dragon war, mortals created Dragonrend, a shout able to make even the mightiest dragons vulnerable. Dragons were hunted to near extinction and the few that remained went into seclusion or hiding, biding their time until Alduin, the World Eater, would return to wake his kin and retake Nirn.
In the 4th Era, Alduin leaves the Tiid-Ahraan, the time-wound and finds his kin dead. He brings them back to life so they might again follow he whose Thu'um is mightiest. None could have challenged him or his Dovah but then there was one who could. Dovahkiin, the last Dragonborn. A single mortal with a Thu'um strong enough to rival and beat Alduin. After that, the Dov likely stopped their invasion of Tamriel, while perhaps not their attacks on mortals. A balanced peace, for now.
In the Third or Fourth Era, have you ever read about the Planemeld? No? Have you ever read about dragons in Elsweyr? No? Have you ever read about the failings of High Chancellor Abnur Tharn of the Empire under the rule of Valen Aquilarios? No? It's as if someone in a high position very adept at screwing things up while trying to do the right thing for the Empire made these recordings getting lost during the Interregnum. It was troubled times, you know?
In the Third or Fourth Era, have you ever read about the Planemeld? No? Have you ever read about dragons in Elsweyr? No? Have you ever read about the failings of High Chancellor Abnur Tharn of the Empire under the rule of Valen Aquilarios? No? It's as if someone in a high position very adept at screwing things up while trying to do the right thing for the Empire made these recordings getting lost during the Interregnum. It was troubled times, you know?
RinaldoGandolphi wrote: »In the Third or Fourth Era, have you ever read about the Planemeld? No? Have you ever read about dragons in Elsweyr? No? Have you ever read about the failings of High Chancellor Abnur Tharn of the Empire under the rule of Valen Aquilarios? No? It's as if someone in a high position very adept at screwing things up while trying to do the right thing for the Empire made these recordings getting lost during the Interregnum. It was troubled times, you know?
ESO Exists in a sort of Paradox. The game literally screams this everywhere if you pay attention to the story.