This poll is so flawed because probably no one voting has read any of the lorebooks. I read the lorebooks and listen to the quests and AD is the worst and DC is the best and EP in the middle.
Stranglehands wrote: »All three of them are made up of nations who have never been able to get along - I think one thing the lore is fairly clear on is that it takes a supernatural conquering force (in the form of Tiber Septim) to get them to settle down. You've probably got to think of the failure modes-
DC: The bretons are supposed to be plagued by infighting between the various aristocrats and their politics is general feudalistic chaos, so King Emeric probably had a pretty huge sword of Damocles over his head before he even got involved with the redguards. Like, the dark brotherhood probably know all the secret passages in his castle inside out. With the redguards you've got a ready made civil war due to the long-standing crown and forbear factions, and they're proud and independent so probably bear the idea of being ruled by a breton king very heavily. The diplomatic marriage is a good idea but it's just one assassination away from catastrophic failure. As for the orcs, it's only a matter of time before they lose interest in fighting for people who hate them, and I don't they could ever be relied on really. On the other hand they're unlikely to be a loose cannon if they do leave. Overall strength rating: 3/5
AD: Altmer live a long time. They don't work like humans, and just aren't impressed by the stuff Ayrenn achieves during her reign. Those deeds just serve to impress the khajiit and bosmer, who are effectively like animals to them because their lives are so comparatively short and violent. Veiled heritance aside, Ayrenn is probably going to be merely tolerated by her fellow altmer for hundreds of years to come. But then again, altmer live a long time so their real political processes take place over centuries rather than years, and they're very good at hiding their strength instead of making a great display of temporal power. I would expect they would fall away from the alliance because they're just not interested in making a play for mainland Tamriel unless they've already seen to it that victory is inevitable (which is what happens in the 4th Era). On the other hand, Summerset isn't under threat from anyone else, it's effectively impregnable. Again it took a supernatural fluke in the form of Tiber Septim for that impregnability to fail.
Whether the other two stay in line depends entirely on whether the altmer keep them in line; they're naturally enemies to each other and to co-operation with other races in general. They would probably not stand up for long against a concerted assault from a powerful foe, the inhospitability of their homelands notwithstanding. Overall strength rating: 4/5
EP: Doomed. The nords and dunmer are both more likely to succeed alone than as an alliance, whereas the argonians aren't really the conquering type - I mean, at the end of the day, they are very much like plants, occupying the areas where they can live comfortably, prudently driving out unfriendly competition and just not feeling the need to expand en masse. Neither, really, are the Dunmer - their whole identity is built around living where nobody else would want to live, and being essentially impossible to conquer on a cultural level (for example, do house Telvanni in any way resemble imperial citizens in Morrowind?) The nords do have a history and culture of conquest, but it's always been on their own terms. In a territorial war, either victory or defeat in any measure would surely fatally fracture the alliance and all three races would turn on each other. Overall strength rating: 1/5
milesrodneymcneely2_ESO wrote: »Ebonheart Pact for three reasons:
1: Almalexia
2: Sotha Sil
3: Vivec
Tell that to Mehrunes Dagon.I like Peanuts.
milesrodneymcneely2_ESO wrote: »
Ebonheart Pact for three reasons:
1: Almalexia
2: Sotha Sil
3: Vivec
Pfft, those jumped-up Chimer magicians masquerading as gods aren't worth Peanuts!!!!
starkerealm wrote: »
While the Argonians are seriously badass, I kinda suspect their actions during the Oblivion Crisis had more to do with Black Marsh being more messed up than most planes of Oblivion, and less with them being the most badass badasses that ever badassed on Tamriel.
lol.Stranglehands wrote: »whereas the argonians aren't really the conquering type - I mean, at the end of the day, they are very much like plants
milesrodneymcneely2_ESO wrote: »Ebonheart Pact for three reasons:
1: Almalexia
2: Sotha Sil
3: Vivec
milesrodneymcneely2_ESO wrote: »Ebonheart Pact for three reasons:
1: Almalexia
2: Sotha Sil
3: Vivec
The AD from Skyrim is not the same AD from TESO. The fact that they involve the Altmer and the name is kind of the only thing they have in common.Prof_Bawbag wrote: »Purely going on Skyrim, the AD would win the day. Why, because my crystal ball tells me something bad is gonna happen in Morrowind, something bad is gonna happen in Cyrodiil and the AD [Altmer] are gonna use this to their advantage, whilst shitting all over the Bosmer in the process.
.The AD from Skyrim is not the same AD from TESO. The fact that they involve the Altmer and the name is kind of the only thing they have in common.Prof_Bawbag wrote: »Purely going on Skyrim, the AD would win the day. Why, because my crystal ball tells me something bad is gonna happen in Morrowind, something bad is gonna happen in Cyrodiil and the AD [Altmer] are gonna use this to their advantage, whilst shitting all over the Bosmer in the process.
What happens is that they break up and at some point some other completely new entity forms and decides to use the name.The new AD also falls and then after quite some time yet another entity forms and uses the name. This third AD is the one from TES 5. There is no conclusion that can be drawn about the short term future following TESO from the later ADs.
Lightninvash wrote: »the queen is obviously the boss of the other 2
.The AD from Skyrim is not the same AD from TESO. The fact that they involve the Altmer and the name is kind of the only thing they have in common.Prof_Bawbag wrote: »Purely going on Skyrim, the AD would win the day. Why, because my crystal ball tells me something bad is gonna happen in Morrowind, something bad is gonna happen in Cyrodiil and the AD [Altmer] are gonna use this to their advantage, whilst shitting all over the Bosmer in the process.
What happens is that they break up and at some point some other completely new entity forms and decides to use the name.The new AD also falls and then after quite some time yet another entity forms and uses the name. This third AD is the one from TES 5. There is no conclusion that can be drawn about the short term future following TESO from the later ADs.
KiraTsukasa wrote: »None of them are stronger, which is why we have a three way deadlock going on right now. If one of them was stronger, the other two would either band together and wipe them out, or the stronger faction would sweep the other two and control all of Tamriel and the game would be pointless.
starkerealm wrote: ».The AD from Skyrim is not the same AD from TESO. The fact that they involve the Altmer and the name is kind of the only thing they have in common.Prof_Bawbag wrote: »Purely going on Skyrim, the AD would win the day. Why, because my crystal ball tells me something bad is gonna happen in Morrowind, something bad is gonna happen in Cyrodiil and the AD [Altmer] are gonna use this to their advantage, whilst shitting all over the Bosmer in the process.
What happens is that they break up and at some point some other completely new entity forms and decides to use the name.The new AD also falls and then after quite some time yet another entity forms and uses the name. This third AD is the one from TES 5. There is no conclusion that can be drawn about the short term future following TESO from the later ADs.
Interestingly, though, the Thalmor are the same organization. I'd made the mistake of thinking there were a new group co-opting the name, until I was reading something in Skyrim (The Rising Threat, I think), and noticed that, no, after the Oblivion crisis they became more aggressive, but they'd always been, basically what we see in ESO.