"I am whatever the people need me to be. A guardian. An oppressor. For some, too distant. For others, too meddlesome. I am the canvas upon which they paint their dreams and resentments. A vessel for their hopes and doubts.
A mirror. Nothing more."
Where others see dark crowns numbered ten and six, Sotha Sil sees shadows and nothing more. For the Daedra are the lie that creation tells itself. Like their father, Padomay, they are Nothing. And in the Tamriel Final, Nothing shall hold no sway. Anuvanna'si. Their black mountain called "Oblivion" shall sink into the Furnace of Forgotten Numbers, where all lies burn and brittle multitudes turn to slag.
kinguardian wrote: »@Xaramasa
Yes he would have still come up with different recipes because it is his passion and he wants to share it with everyone because he enjoys seeing people enjoying his food.
The difference is that he would make quicker progress because he would have better access to what he needs.
The way I see it Sotha Sil has completely lost his empathy after millenia of being a god and having a deeper understanding of reality than any other person alive (probably even including Vivec and Almalexia).
Also, I'm pretty sure he didn't force anyone to live in his Clockwork City. His most devout worshippers probably begged him to take them to his Clockwork City so they could see the miracles with their own eyes. Sotha Sil granted their wish and got back to his work, leaving them to their own devices. And because it was never meant to be inhabited by anyone other than the living god himself and his creations, it's not a good place to be living in, so the people there have to make the most of it or perish. And they cannot leave either because it would reveal the secret of the Clockwork City's whereabouts.
On a sidenote, ESO has kind of broken the continuity there by implying that everyone outside now suddenly knows about where Clockwork City is and can get stuff from there, like the Skeevatons seen in Frostvault. It also makes you think why the Daedra, now that they know, don't come back for round two and invade Clockwork City again. Perhaps it's pointless without the Skeleton Key? Or it has something to do with Sotha Sil's leverage that made the Daedra agree to the Coldharbour Compact?
Then hear my words. Nocturnal stole a secret I thought well hidden. I developed a technique for utilizing life energy as a source of power. I suspect she will use that technique to amplify the Crystal Tower."
I think your analysis is good, though slightly incorrect.
Sotha Sil is the most benevolent of him, Vivec and Almalexia. He is also the most morose and crushed by the pressure of absolute certainty and duty.
Vivec enjoys Godhood. Almalexia relishes it. Sotha Sil does not seem to share this. He does not do things out of kindness, and prefers to be quite hands off with his Apostles, due to the fact that some could see it as being overbearing. Some see it as not being hands on enough.
He does things because he feels he is compelled to, and therefore must. He reveals quite a bit to The Vestige about who he really is after the main quest of Clockwork City, and that whole long conversation was deeply fascinating and wholly satisfying as a lover of the lore.
Don't mistake duty for kindness. If Sotha Sil did not feel compelled to do what he does, it would end up like areas of the Clockwork City that he just disregards and leaves incomplete or changes. He even brokered a deal with Daedric Princes. Again, because he feels it his duty to do so. But he has a heck of a lot more heart than the other two false Gods.
...now I so want to rush thou Cadwell's Gold just to start the daedric wars quests....damn self-imposed quest order xD