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Why is Betrayal so common?

RebornV3x
RebornV3x
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Every main quest line in the game has to do with betrayal. Can the writers come up with a big bad or any major plot point that doesn't include someone in your small circle of essential NPCs not betray you. Its so old and overused in ESO. Also to keep this spoiler free I knew who the Ascendant Lord was immediately an was not in the least bit surprised with the reveal its so predictable just stop.

your best bet is to not trust anyone and suspect everyone.

Edited by ZOS_Hadeostry on 6 May 2023 03:12
Xbox One - NA GT: RebornV3x
I also play on PC from time to time but I just wanna be left alone on there so sorry.
  • spartaxoxo
    spartaxoxo
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    The only reason I knew who the ascendant lord was, was because this game constantly has these twists. I don't think they actually planted the seeds in the story itself that well.
  • RebornV3x
    RebornV3x
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    they don't plant the seeds at all until you beat both High Island and Galen but the next quest after that is the reveal. but its just so predictable
    Xbox One - NA GT: RebornV3x
    I also play on PC from time to time but I just wanna be left alone on there so sorry.
  • SeaGtGruff
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    Betrayal has been central to the Elder Scrolls ever since Emperor Uriel Septim VII was betrayed by Jagar Tharn and had to be rescued by the Eternal Champion. It may be a trope in RPGs, but betrayal also happens an awful lot in the real world.
    I've fought mudcrabs more fearsome than me!
  • rpa
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    Well meaning but incompetent/stubborn ally who turns to be foe, indecisive princess who grows hefty balls, have to choose one to be sacrificed for reasons, disposable npc who dies just after (or before) you have talked to them and so on, not necessarily bad tropes at first time but after 3rd or 4th repetition of same it does get bit predictable.
  • Paulytnz
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    Betrayal is used so much because it's the easiest and quickest way to tell your audience "this is the bad guy, come and get him/her". It is also a way to sort of give a bad guy a sort of win. We know they are going to always lose in the end, they can't win. So give them a small victory to show that they really are some sort of a threat.

    The same happens in movies too. Then there is another thing they do a lot in movies but not so much in games yet, but it will probably come to that soon enough. That being bad guys always killing their own people, usually in violent ways. Why would they do this? All it does is make them weaker by having less people on their side to help them, right? But again, it's to say: "this guy is bad, REALLY bad" and again to give him some sort of a win, because again we know they can never win in the end.

  • Elsonso
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    spartaxoxo wrote: »
    The only reason I knew who the ascendant lord was, was because this game constantly has these twists. I don't think they actually planted the seeds in the story itself that well.

    Yes. Seeds were planted early in the High Isle quest. This one was more obvious than Greymoor and Blackwood. All that was required was to guess that ZOS was going to do the predictable and the dialog told you who it was. :smile:

    I don't see that the problem is that they are using "betrayal" in the story, but how they have included it in recent Chapter stories. Using it as a "plot twist" rather than a "discovery" is old now. Time for them to move on. :smile:



    ESO Plus: No
    PC NA/EU: @Elsonso
    XBox EU/NA: @ElsonsoJannus
    X/Twitter: ElsonsoJannus
  • Mascen
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    I suppose the better question to ask is what's a good example of a non-betrayal BBEG scenario you liked and thought was good? That way it can be used as a source of inspiration.
  • Finedaible
    Finedaible
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    Perhaps a bit overused, but I also feel like the theme of betrayal hasn't been executed well since Orsinium and some of the base game quests like with
    Aera Earth-Turner and the Fighter's Guild quest for example.

    The problem is, the stories in the year-long format are not drawn out long enough for players to work closely with a particular character in order to make a betrayal feel all that surprising. There has to be a sense of trust and familiarity that must be built up first. I think this may be one of the reasons for abandoning the format this time. Heck, if they had made Jakarn in High Isle turn out to be the Ascendant Magus THAT would have been an impactful betrayal worth talking about, but using the oldest characters cannot be taken lightly imo.
  • AzuraFan
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    It was the same with some guild quest lines in the single-player games. Someone betrays the guild and, well, I won't spoil it for anyone. Hopefully the same won't happen in TES6.
  • spartaxoxo
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    RebornV3x wrote: »
    they don't plant the seeds at all until you beat both High Island and Galen but the next quest after that is the reveal. but its just so predictable

    I think there is a little bit of seed planting in Galen.
    His claims about what happened in the cathedral are pretty flimsy

    But in High Isle there's really no reason to suspect him unless you're just automatically assuming from past experience with the game. The only reason anyone does is because they have this type of thing as a plot point of pretty much every chapter. It is to the point that it would have actually subverted our expectations if he was who he said he was.
    Edited by spartaxoxo on 5 May 2023 19:53
  • tomofhyrule
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    spartaxoxo wrote: »
    RebornV3x wrote: »
    they don't plant the seeds at all until you beat both High Island and Galen but the next quest after that is the reveal. but its just so predictable

    I think there is a little bit of seed planting in Galen.
    His claims about what happened in the cathedral are pretty flimsy

    But in High Isle there's really no reason to suspect him unless you're just automatically assuming from past experience with the game. The only reason anyone does is because they have this type of thing as a plot point of pretty much every chapter. It is to the point that it would have actually subverted our expectations if he was who he said he was.

    I'll admit, I loathed the High Isle storyline and I still can't bring myself to do the epilogue. Firesong was fantastic though.

    But yes, the villain was as paper-thin and obvious as possible. I don't even need to play the epilogue or even have knowledge of the history of various storylines here to guess that the character who is so obviously over-the-top "I love everybody and everything and I'd never hurt a fly! How could all of this stuff keep happening!?" is totally the one behind it all. Honestly, I'd have been much more surprised if it turned out that he really was that incompetently useless all along and that someone else truly was behind it all. Like honestly, we've got Tamriel's most renowned detective who more than once finds out something bad happens right after some characters go off together alone with our 'nice guy,' and then surprisingly he's the only one unharmed? And she doesn't even take the time to think twice about how suspicious that looks? Definitely makes me think that she can't be Investigator Vale because Investigator Vale is perceptive and smart, which Lady Arabelle has proven time and time again that she is not.
    ...maybe she needs Eveli with her to be able to point out the obvious.

    I don't think knowing the twist or the formula are necessarily bad though. There are times that you can know where the story's going and still enjoy it getting there.

    Contrast this to something like Orsinium. I know how Orc stories go so I was able to call out the true villain about a third of the way through the storyline. And I called it pretty well exactly as to who was manipulating whom to get their way. And it was still amazing. I'd actually have been royally pissed if it hadn't gone exactly according to the formula.

    I think my problem was that High Isle just felt like a complete mess. The Alliance Leaders usurped what should have been a strong 'landed nobles vs. underclass vs. druids' Bretonic story, and instead it felt like the Bretons got usurped in their own chapter by having Queen Mary Sue come in and fix all of the problems by being just better than everyone at everything. Instead of getting a look into Breton chivalric structure, we got to hear that King Jorunn was too useless of a leader to stop sleeping with some rando to come to a peace conference. And then who cares about character relationships and histories when we can get Za'ji and Jakarn to interject so much comic relief into everything that modern Marvel movies would cringe.
    ...Yes, I am furious about how bad that storyline was.
  • Elsonso
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    spartaxoxo wrote: »
    RebornV3x wrote: »
    they don't plant the seeds at all until you beat both High Island and Galen but the next quest after that is the reveal. but its just so predictable

    I think there is a little bit of seed planting in Galen.
    His claims about what happened in the cathedral are pretty flimsy

    But in High Isle there's really no reason to suspect him unless you're just automatically assuming from past experience with the game. The only reason anyone does is because they have this type of thing as a plot point of pretty much every chapter. It is to the point that it would have actually subverted our expectations if he was who he said he was.

    Not precisely true. I suspect that ZOS wanted people to be able to guess before the end of the first quest.

    If they didn't want people to guess... well... oops.

    ESO Plus: No
    PC NA/EU: @Elsonso
    XBox EU/NA: @ElsonsoJannus
    X/Twitter: ElsonsoJannus
  • AScarlato
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    spartaxoxo wrote: »
    The only reason I knew who the ascendant lord was, was because this game constantly has these twists. I don't think they actually planted the seeds in the story itself that well.

    I actually really liked the character without the betrayal.

    I did see very early in High Isle they dropped a hint about possible motivation, but the character was more compelling before doing a 180 into a schlocky villain IMO.
  • Dr_Con
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    The DLC guild storylines hit differently because the betrayal happened to other people before you entered the story.

    It doesn't hurt to know who an antagonist is but to make them undefeatable. They also tend to tell the story of how daedric princes we fight are undefeatable unless we use some amazing power, so it's not that betrayal isn't the only thing they use.

    It would be nice to have a quest giver who you know is crazy and that you will probably have to put down eventually. It would also be fine to have a known antagonist who you can't attack directly. Twists aren't necessary unless a known force corrupts a known friend, if absolutely necessary some twists should only happen due to our own choices.
  • chessalavakia_ESO
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    Using betrayal provides an easy way for the player to get to know the antagonist more, positions the players so that they are more likely to dislike the antagonist without making the antagonist need to be super evil, and opens up the potential to give the antagonist wins that don't make players feel diminished in their combat prowess which is especially an issue for less magical antagonists.

    With that said, some of the betrayal is also realistic because you have absolutely massive amounts of power centralized in leaders that frankly aren't very good at leading and are frequently ignoring their populace or having lapses in self control.


  • VaranisArano
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    There's a reason why my Vestige Varanis Arano is pretty paranoid. Usually justifiably.
  • wolfie1.0.
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    Anyone else feel like the real punch line is that we are the Villan all along?
  • ZOS_Hadeostry
    Greetings,

    After further review we have decided to move this thread to a category we think is more appropriate for this topic.

    Thank you for your understanding
    Staff Post
  • FrancisCrawford
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    The only Elder Srolls game I played before ESO was Morrowind -- and it's hard to recall an organization-leading quest-giver you DIDN'T have to fight by the end.

    Edited by FrancisCrawford on 6 May 2023 04:31
  • rpa
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    It's a 9 year ongoing entertainment product from murrica.
  • ixthUA
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    Good point to complete quests without reading them (reading is totally unrequired for their completion).
  • fxeconomisteb17_ESO
    Betrayal is common in real world politics. Got to this conclusion after watching 33 years of politics. And it's usually one way.
    It provides challenges to the betrayed forces, up to the measure that these forces are sincere about their true doctrine. For example a party is being betrayed from the inside, but you may realize that most of it was in a betrayal condition before and it doesn't even care about being betrayed. Betrayal also provides challenges to those who will suffer due to policy changes introduced due to betrayals. For instance a nice party is being betrayed, loses majority, a bad party comes in, brings austerity, millions suffer as a result, and will be challenged to find solutions to improve their life.

    As this happens in the real world, it provides a good model for the Elder Scrolls world. After all, it's a medieval world out there featuring politics and consequences of these politics. For instance a king may make a bad allegiance which is a good business for his cronies around but bad for the people.
    "Is it true her wounds healed on their own ? Yes" No s***, at 75% health regen penalty!

    I was a vampire like you, but then I took an idea to the head...
  • mdjessup4906
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    Just because betrayal happens in real life doesn't mean they need to be so boilerplate about it. I knew
    lord bacarro
    was the bad guy by his voice alone.
    That skyrim king
    too.That's pretty sad.
    Edited by mdjessup4906 on 6 May 2023 18:29
  • jle30303
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    The only Elder Srolls game I played before ESO was Morrowind -- and it's hard to recall an organization-leading quest-giver you DIDN'T have to fight by the end.
    Gentleman Jim Stacey - if you did the Thieves Guild quest line to its end and took *that* ending to the Fighters Guild quest line.
    Also, Caius Cosades and, one might guess, technically, Vivec...
    Edited by jle30303 on 6 May 2023 23:06
  • chessalavakia_ESO
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    jle30303 wrote: »
    The only Elder Srolls game I played before ESO was Morrowind -- and it's hard to recall an organization-leading quest-giver you DIDN'T have to fight by the end.
    Gentleman Jim Stacey - if you did the Thieves Guild quest line to its end and took *that* ending to the Fighters Guild quest line.
    Also, Caius Cosades and, one might guess, technically, Vivec...
    You could also leave the leader of the Morag Tong, the Mage's Guild, the Tribunal Temple, House Hlaalu, and the Imperial Cult alive if I remember correctly

  • RebornV3x
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    wolfie1.0. wrote: »
    Anyone else feel like the real punch line is that we are the Villan all along?

    one mans freedom fighter is another mans terrorist

    the problem I have is the last couple of big bads just wanna destroy the world having a grey or even anti hero betrayal might be a good change. like someone whose at odds with your way of doing things or even someone that got to you first and you happen to be on the "wrong side" I liked what they started with the Ascendant Lord and Druid King thing but by the end of the Galen/Firesong quests he goes full destroy the world act.
    Xbox One - NA GT: RebornV3x
    I also play on PC from time to time but I just wanna be left alone on there so sorry.
  • Eporem
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    RebornV3x wrote: »
    wolfie1.0. wrote: »
    Anyone else feel like the real punch line is that we are the Villan all along?

    one mans freedom fighter is another mans terrorist

    the problem I have is the last couple of big bads just wanna destroy the world having a grey or even anti hero betrayal might be a good change. like someone whose at odds with your way of doing things or even someone that got to you first and you happen to be on the "wrong side" I liked what they started with the Ascendant Lord and Druid King thing but by the end of the Galen/Firesong quests he goes full destroy the world act.

    it would be to me a character's played choice - whether they believe what they are told in the quest - and if they choose to eliminate the villian or whatever the quest givers want done, like leaving that one in a cave instead of having to make his choice. I would love as well to see an option if you choose these different ways with an rapport bar like the companions have.
  • E_Lucan
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    Exactly - I was hoping until the very last quest that I'd be wrong and they wouldn't do the (HI/Firesong spoilers)
    "this guy that's been working with you was a villain all along!" thing. The NPCs, of course, never expect it, but after you play through a bunch of the chapters/DLCs you come to expect exactly that to happen. And then it's just frustrating, because for the 20th time you're saving a bunch of people who totally didn't see any of this coming because how could one of their friends turn against them so suddenly. I hope they come up with a new thing for the villain reveal in future DLCs because at this point you go into a new story just looking around trying to guess who is inevitably going to betray everyone.
  • Hurbster
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    It's up there with 'lost princess' thar we had for a couple of expansions .
    So they raised the floor and lowered the ceiling. Except the ceiling has spikes in it now and the floor is also lava.
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