I guess im confused about this part, So if your an altmer living outside summerset, you where formerly not allowed in? What about Woodelves or Khajiit?
I guess im confused about this part, So if your an altmer living outside summerset, you where formerly not allowed in? What about Woodelves or Khajiit?
These are the extreme xenophobes of Tamriel. They probably would regard other Altmer of a different mind-set as people to be kept out. There are real-life "forbidden cities" etc. from various eras where this was the case. An Island has natural barriers that make it a good candidate for that treatment.
psychotrip wrote: »I guess im confused about this part, So if your an altmer living outside summerset, you where formerly not allowed in? What about Woodelves or Khajiit?
These are the extreme xenophobes of Tamriel. They probably would regard other Altmer of a different mind-set as people to be kept out. There are real-life "forbidden cities" etc. from various eras where this was the case. An Island has natural barriers that make it a good candidate for that treatment.
Except there's a redguard whose family has been living in Summerset for generations, according to the latest gameplay videos. He explicitly says outsiders are rare, but not unheard of. Turns out Altmer aren't quite as xenophobic as we thought.
MythicEmperor wrote: »psychotrip wrote: »I guess im confused about this part, So if your an altmer living outside summerset, you where formerly not allowed in? What about Woodelves or Khajiit?
These are the extreme xenophobes of Tamriel. They probably would regard other Altmer of a different mind-set as people to be kept out. There are real-life "forbidden cities" etc. from various eras where this was the case. An Island has natural barriers that make it a good candidate for that treatment.
Except there's a redguard whose family has been living in Summerset for generations, according to the latest gameplay videos. He explicitly says outsiders are rare, but not unheard of. Turns out Altmer aren't quite as xenophobic as we thought.
That’s unfortunate. Are there no homogeneous cultures in even the most elitist corners of Tamriel? These alliances have brought nothing but confusion as to what constitutes a culture. What happened to the themes of racism and ignorance so prevalent in previous TES games? Is everyone just 100% tolerant in a time period nearly a thousand years before the main games? Cultures generally progress socially throughout a given time period. This leads me to two possible conclusions:
1. Racism increases from ESO to the main games, meaning ZOS believes increased discrimination to be the natural progression of society.
2. ZOS disregards the logical progression of society in order to avoid the dark themes that define TES in the name of safety and conformity to PC culture.
What can be taken from this post? Showcasing racism and discrimination in ESO as the ‘norm’ alongside the barbarism that should be present in this ancient time would reveal the understanding that societies become less racist over time, especially over a near thousand year period.
VaranisArano wrote: »MythicEmperor wrote: »psychotrip wrote: »I guess im confused about this part, So if your an altmer living outside summerset, you where formerly not allowed in? What about Woodelves or Khajiit?
These are the extreme xenophobes of Tamriel. They probably would regard other Altmer of a different mind-set as people to be kept out. There are real-life "forbidden cities" etc. from various eras where this was the case. An Island has natural barriers that make it a good candidate for that treatment.
Except there's a redguard whose family has been living in Summerset for generations, according to the latest gameplay videos. He explicitly says outsiders are rare, but not unheard of. Turns out Altmer aren't quite as xenophobic as we thought.
That’s unfortunate. Are there no homogeneous cultures in even the most elitist corners of Tamriel? These alliances have brought nothing but confusion as to what constitutes a culture. What happened to the themes of racism and ignorance so prevalent in previous TES games? Is everyone just 100% tolerant in a time period nearly a thousand years before the main games? Cultures generally progress socially throughout a given time period. This leads me to two possible conclusions:
1. Racism increases from ESO to the main games, meaning ZOS believes increased discrimination to be the natural progression of society.
2. ZOS disregards the logical progression of society in order to avoid the dark themes that define TES in the name of safety and conformity to PC culture.
What can be taken from this post? Showcasing racism and discrimination in ESO as the ‘norm’ alongside the barbarism that should be present in this ancient time would reveal the understanding that societies become less racist over time, especially over a near thousand year period.
To be entirely fair, if a bunch of outsiders descended on my ancestral homeland and pillaged and murdered their way through my people the way you know Dark Brotherhood/Thieves Guild players are going to, I'd expect my people to get a lot more racist and xenophobic too.
Plot twist: all those players who are like "I'm gonna kill all the elves because of TES 5 Skyrim" actually lead to the racial hatred that eventually creates the Thalmor of Skyrim's era.
VaranisArano wrote: »MythicEmperor wrote: »psychotrip wrote: »I guess im confused about this part, So if your an altmer living outside summerset, you where formerly not allowed in? What about Woodelves or Khajiit?
These are the extreme xenophobes of Tamriel. They probably would regard other Altmer of a different mind-set as people to be kept out. There are real-life "forbidden cities" etc. from various eras where this was the case. An Island has natural barriers that make it a good candidate for that treatment.
Except there's a redguard whose family has been living in Summerset for generations, according to the latest gameplay videos. He explicitly says outsiders are rare, but not unheard of. Turns out Altmer aren't quite as xenophobic as we thought.
That’s unfortunate. Are there no homogeneous cultures in even the most elitist corners of Tamriel? These alliances have brought nothing but confusion as to what constitutes a culture. What happened to the themes of racism and ignorance so prevalent in previous TES games? Is everyone just 100% tolerant in a time period nearly a thousand years before the main games? Cultures generally progress socially throughout a given time period. This leads me to two possible conclusions:
1. Racism increases from ESO to the main games, meaning ZOS believes increased discrimination to be the natural progression of society.
2. ZOS disregards the logical progression of society in order to avoid the dark themes that define TES in the name of safety and conformity to PC culture.
What can be taken from this post? Showcasing racism and discrimination in ESO as the ‘norm’ alongside the barbarism that should be present in this ancient time would reveal the understanding that societies become less racist over time, especially over a near thousand year period.
To be entirely fair, if a bunch of outsiders descended on my ancestral homeland and pillaged and murdered their way through my people the way you know Dark Brotherhood/Thieves Guild players are going to, I'd expect my people to get a lot more racist and xenophobic too.
Plot twist: all those players who are like "I'm gonna kill all the elves because of TES 5 Skyrim" actually lead to the racial hatred that eventually creates the Thalmor of Skyrim's era.
Players in ESO causing the Thalmor in the 4th era is Creation-Kit-is-CHIM level of crazy. I love it.
AwesomeVaranisArano wrote: »Plot twist: all those players who are like "I'm gonna kill all the elves because of TES 5 Skyrim" actually lead to the racial hatred that eventually creates the Thalmor of Skyrim's era.