Wasnt that the second dominion and the third in skyrim?Too many people look at this from a perspective of 4th Era Nirn. The aldmeri dominion hasn't been corrupted fully by the bigots in this time. The AD seems the most stable of the 3 factions at this moment. In fact, the dominion lasts until talos brings the numidium to defeat it.
BloodLegions wrote: »I dont think you guys understand the significance of the brettons elven blood. They only exist as a race due the the mixing of the direnni and ayleids and the nedic population there. There are by all means a half elven race. Look.at their ears next time.you make one. Regardless of inter breeding of other more nedic based races they are by all accounts half elven as it doesn't matter if they bread more with each other as the created race from elven and nedic breeding was the brettons. Meaning that they always have and always will have elven blood and it will always be strong. Unless they dilute it with the alessians. Who also have elven blood due to their treatment at the hands of the ayleids. The most untainted blood lies only in the nords or the red guards.
karthrag_inak wrote: »This one thinks the more relevant question is why get game of epic fantasy, with many amazing races, just to play a human? Perhaps such a person would also like to have gameplay where they would ...erm...get a job? Have a mortgage, or perhaps homework? Perhaps one would be yearning for the "Housing : Weekly Chores" expansion, yes?
Seems very mundane and boring to this one, but then again, he enjoys living on the edge, this one does
The TES rules of racial inheritance make the child 100% the race of its mother. There is no "dilution" possible.
If your mother was Breton, you're 100% Breton. If she's a Nord, and your father was the Breton, then you're 0% Breton.
All of which contradicts the Bretons being a mixture, but I can't help that.
The TES rules of racial inheritance make the child 100% the race of its mother. There is no "dilution" possible.
If your mother was Breton, you're 100% Breton. If she's a Nord, and your father was the Breton, then you're 0% Breton.
All of which contradicts the Bretons being a mixture, but I can't help that.
The TES rules of racial inheritance make the child 100% the race of its mother. There is no "dilution" possible.
If your mother was Breton, you're 100% Breton. If she's a Nord, and your father was the Breton, then you're 0% Breton.
All of which contradicts the Bretons being a mixture, but I can't help that.
Cygemai_Hlervu wrote: »The TES rules of racial inheritance make the child 100% the race of its mother. There is no "dilution" possible.
If your mother was Breton, you're 100% Breton. If she's a Nord, and your father was the Breton, then you're 0% Breton.
All of which contradicts the Bretons being a mixture, but I can't help that.
What sources support your idea and make you that confident? The opposite research results are published by the Council of Healers of the Imperial University and Agronak gro-Malog, Aeliah Renmus, Lyris Titanborn, Tobias are it's a practical evidence.
VaranisArano wrote: »Cygemai_Hlervu wrote: »The TES rules of racial inheritance make the child 100% the race of its mother. There is no "dilution" possible.
If your mother was Breton, you're 100% Breton. If she's a Nord, and your father was the Breton, then you're 0% Breton.
All of which contradicts the Bretons being a mixture, but I can't help that.
What sources support your idea and make you that confident? The opposite research results are published by the Council of Healers of the Imperial University and Agronak gro-Malog, Aeliah Renmus, Lyris Titanborn, Tobias are it's a practical evidence.
In a weird sense, it's both.
Specifically, your source says "Generally the offspring bear the racial traits of the mother, though some traces of the father's race may also be present."
So in gameplay terms, the player character is 100% their mother's race. If someone wants to play an Imperial, then their mother was an Imperial and they have the racial traits (and powers) of an Imperial. 100%. There's no gameplay ability to say "Well, my character's father was a Nord, so my character has some Nordic frost resistance even though they're Imperial." At most, the character can have some physical characteristics, like maybe the Imperial is on the taller or bulkier side of the Imperial sliders to represent their heritage. But even there, we can't use another race's sliders.
In short, we can roleplay a character who's half-[insert father's race here], but in terms of gameplay, we're 100% the mother's race.
Now, NPCs, on the other hand, can have a little more freedom in terms of appearances, simply because the game artists can do whatever they like. For example, Lyris Titanborn is huge, which reflects her part-giant heritage. Now, I could say that my character is likewise part-giant, as its clearly possible, yet I cannot have access to the same appearance sliders to represent that heritage in the same way as Lyris.
But Bretons?
IDK, its that weird intersection of two aspects of the lore. It doesn't make sense that Bretons are a mix of elven and human traits in a franchise that fairly specifically says that character traits follow the mother. Unless we speculate that Bretons are from generations of elf father/human mother such that "traces of the father" built up enough to produce what's effectively a "part-even" race. Then as long as most Bretons marry other Bretons, you'd still see those traits breeding true through generations.
The_Drop_Bear wrote: »The_Drop_Bear wrote: »The_Drop_Bear wrote: »The_Drop_Bear wrote: »Being in an era before social media, it's entirely possible the average human doesn't know exactly what AD's stance is on everything - and even if they hear it, they might not believe it.
Also, AD in ESO is not the same as the AD in the future. They're practically snowflakes now by comparison, I miss Skyrim's Thalmor.
Also regarding Bretons specifically: they are, technically, half-altmer. So they could feel as much of a belonging in AD as they would in High Rock, even if the Altmer might not necessarily see it that way.
The lore is filled with peculiar alliances like that. Like, it might seem strange that the divine-worshiping Ayleids joined the Alessian empire, with our retrospective knowledge of what the Alessians do to the Ayleids, but for them it was probably a good idea at the time.
Bretons aren't half altmer at all, the elf blood in them is quite small
They aren't called Manmer for nothing.
They aren't called manmer, other than as a slur. The elf blood in them came from 1000's of years ago, it's very weak now
Based on? Their affinity to magic is a very strong indicator of the elven influence in their blood.
Based on the fact that most bretons have Breton parents, bretons are humans so every generation has less elf blood. The elf blood came from the nedic people of high rock were ruled over and enslaved by the dirreni clan. Which ended in 1E 500. That was 3002 years before ESO.
There originally were no such thing as bretons. Bretons came about from Nedes mixing with elves. One parent from here, one parent from there. This makes them as much humans as they are elves, and mixing among each other doesn't change that.
Sure, from the game's mechanical standpoint, Bretons are human. But from a lore standpoint, they literally came about from 50% human 50% elf and then carried on from there.
Originally yes, but every generation the elf blood in them shrinks as their parents are human. And they have had 3002 years. Think about it what happens when you times 1/2 by 1/2 you get 1/4.
The_Drop_Bear wrote: »VaranisArano wrote: »Cygemai_Hlervu wrote: »The TES rules of racial inheritance make the child 100% the race of its mother. There is no "dilution" possible.
If your mother was Breton, you're 100% Breton. If she's a Nord, and your father was the Breton, then you're 0% Breton.
All of which contradicts the Bretons being a mixture, but I can't help that.
What sources support your idea and make you that confident? The opposite research results are published by the Council of Healers of the Imperial University and Agronak gro-Malog, Aeliah Renmus, Lyris Titanborn, Tobias are it's a practical evidence.
In a weird sense, it's both.
Specifically, your source says "Generally the offspring bear the racial traits of the mother, though some traces of the father's race may also be present."
So in gameplay terms, the player character is 100% their mother's race. If someone wants to play an Imperial, then their mother was an Imperial and they have the racial traits (and powers) of an Imperial. 100%. There's no gameplay ability to say "Well, my character's father was a Nord, so my character has some Nordic frost resistance even though they're Imperial." At most, the character can have some physical characteristics, like maybe the Imperial is on the taller or bulkier side of the Imperial sliders to represent their heritage. But even there, we can't use another race's sliders.
In short, we can roleplay a character who's half-[insert father's race here], but in terms of gameplay, we're 100% the mother's race.
Now, NPCs, on the other hand, can have a little more freedom in terms of appearances, simply because the game artists can do whatever they like. For example, Lyris Titanborn is huge, which reflects her part-giant heritage. Now, I could say that my character is likewise part-giant, as its clearly possible, yet I cannot have access to the same appearance sliders to represent that heritage in the same way as Lyris.
But Bretons?
IDK, its that weird intersection of two aspects of the lore. It doesn't make sense that Bretons are a mix of elven and human traits in a franchise that fairly specifically says that character traits follow the mother. Unless we speculate that Bretons are from generations of elf father/human mother such that "traces of the father" built up enough to produce what's effectively a "part-even" race. Then as long as most Bretons marry other Bretons, you'd still see those traits breeding true through generations.
That's exactly how it happened, the nedic people of high rock were enslaved and ruled over by the dirreni for 100's of years
BloodLegions wrote: »I dont think you guys understand the significance of the brettons elven blood. They only exist as a race due the the mixing of the direnni and ayleids and the nedic population there. There are by all means a half elven race. Look.at their ears next time.you make one. Regardless of inter breeding of other more nedic based races they are by all accounts half elven as it doesn't matter if they bread more with each other as the created race from elven and nedic breeding was the brettons. Meaning that they always have and always will have elven blood and it will always be strong. Unless they dilute it with the alessians. Who also have elven blood due to their treatment at the hands of the ayleids. The most untainted blood lies only in the nords or the red guards.
Jacarranda wrote: »I'm asking this after questin in Summersetwhere you enconter Elise Mallon, a breton, whos also eye of the queen, spying for Ayreen.which makes me question why would any human would serve Ayreen and the Dominion if their goal is to end human rule across Tamriel.
Bear in mind that the Thalmor's influence only increased after the Oblivion Crisis and the fall of the Crystal Tower, when they were given greater authority to deal with the deadric invasion of Summerset Isle. Following their success, the Thalmor were hailed as the saviours of Summerset and they subsequently overthrew the Altmeri monarchy and took control.OtarTheMad wrote: »Overall the Aldmeri Dominion of this era isn't like the ones we meet in Skyrim in the 4E. My theory is somehow after the fall of The Veiled Heritance they stayed hidden and worked in secret. Eventually, the Veiled Hertiance worked their way up the Altmer chain of royalty and we finally saw their end game in the Fourth Era. The College in Auridon pretty much confirms this theory for me because how the disguised Veiled Hertiance feels about the Khajiit and Bosmer races are fairly similar to how they feel about them in the fourth era.
This era's Dominion isn't that bad. I have a Nord Dragonknight who is AD and the reason he picked Aldmeri Dominion is not only because he likes Queen Ayrenn's vision but also because he feels like the other alliances are giving up on magic. He feels with the elves he can advance his knowledge of the arcane arts, like his Atmoran ancestors, and not be looked down upon.