Practically none of ESO events and characters were mentioned in the previous games. That's because BGS developers don't have prophetic powers and/or didn't want to spoil the game before it was released. It might seem confusing when you're dealing with a prequel, but it makes perfect sense. The lore wasn't set in stone 20 years ago, it grows organically game by game.
Practically none of ESO events and characters were mentioned in the previous games. That's because BGS developers don't have prophetic powers and/or didn't want to spoil the game before it was released. It might seem confusing when you're dealing with a prequel, but it makes perfect sense. The lore wasn't set in stone 20 years ago, it grows organically game by game.
Practically none of ESO events and characters were mentioned in the previous games. That's because BGS developers don't have prophetic powers and/or didn't want to spoil the game before it was released. It might seem confusing when you're dealing with a prequel, but it makes perfect sense. The lore wasn't set in stone 20 years ago, it grows organically game by game.
Still tho, she is the queen is she not?
TheNephilimCrow wrote: »It would explain some things, but also maybe she did something in the future that gets your history removed. Who knows. But, she is not an Ayleid. I actually like her. Ayleid's seem kind of "high and mighty" snob types.
Ghanima_Atreides wrote: »Ayrenn's birth is well-documented, it even has a date (5th of Second Seed in the year 555 of the Second Era), her parentage is known ( King Hidellith and his wife Kinlady Tuinden), she has a brother...so I think it's highly unlikely for her to be anything other than an unusually tolerant Altmer royal.
Source Ayrenn: The Unforeseen Queen
Dragonbreak. This is still a thing in lore. A point in history where time gets messed up and multiple timelines are experienced at once before re converging into a single point. Alessian Empire had a Dragon Break, and had alternate timelines where the Empire not only conquered Tamriel, but all of Nirn and the planets around it, and when the Dragonbreak ended, the only record of it happening was the souls of dead emperors in the Amulet of Kings that were never recorded in the history books.TheNephilimCrow wrote: »It would explain some things, but also maybe she did something in the future that gets your history removed. Who knows. But, she is not an Ayleid. I actually like her. Ayleid's seem kind of "high and mighty" snob types.
That describes all pre-splilt Aldmer. Really the biggest difference between Ayleids and Altmer is that Ayleids made no secret of their Daedra worship even as they revered Aedra.
Paazhahdrimaak wrote: »Didn't high elves come from alyeid?
Dragonbreak. This is still a thing in lore. A point in history where time gets messed up and multiple timelines are experienced at once before re converging into a single point. Alessian Empire had a Dragon Break, and had alternate timelines where the Empire not only conquered Tamriel, but all of Nirn and the planets around it, and when the Dragonbreak ended, the only record of it happening was the souls of dead emperors in the Amulet of Kings that were never recorded in the history books.TheNephilimCrow wrote: »It would explain some things, but also maybe she did something in the future that gets your history removed. Who knows. But, she is not an Ayleid. I actually like her. Ayleid's seem kind of "high and mighty" snob types.
That describes all pre-splilt Aldmer. Really the biggest difference between Ayleids and Altmer is that Ayleids made no secret of their Daedra worship even as they revered Aedra.