VaranisArano wrote: »
As for the Dunmer, the only reason some of the Houses gave up their Argonian slaves was because the Tribunal said so. Once the Tribunal says "Slavery's back on the menu, boys!" they'll fall all over themselves to start up the raiding parties
again (not that they ever entirely stopped).
I'm not sure it's cartoonish to revert so quickly. Is it really reverting when it's clear that many Dunmer haven't really changed?
psychotrip wrote: »The idea that countless adventurers, soldiers, and all the commoners living and fighting alongside the argonians will just accept tossing their comrades back to the slave pits is...disturbing to say the least. Reluctantly or not, it doesnt make it any less sick.
Its not like the Tribunal control the dunmer's minds, either. We had an entire game about what happens when people begin to question the Temple's legitimacy. You'd think the Tribunal would be a lot more sensitive to the fact that many of their own soldiers fought side by side with the very people they're being forced to put back into chains. What must that be like for both parties?
psychotrip wrote: »The idea that countless adventurers, soldiers, and all the commoners living and fighting alongside the argonians will just accept tossing their comrades back to the slave pits is...disturbing to say the least. Reluctantly or not, it doesnt make it any less sick.
Its not like the Tribunal control the dunmer's minds, either. We had an entire game about what happens when people begin to question the Temple's legitimacy. You'd think the Tribunal would be a lot more sensitive to the fact that many of their own soldiers fought side by side with the very people they're being forced to put back into chains. What must that be like for both parties?
There is no law against free Argonians existing in Morrowind, so I don't think soldiers would be tasked with re-enslaving them. Private slave hunter organizations still exist during the Pact. Given they can now openly raid the other alliances, possibly not even fewer in number. Many free Argonians would then start losing their precarious and underpaid enployment due to an resurgance of cheap slave labour, and either leave or find themselves in a vulnerable position to be enslaved again themselves.
After the war, most Dunmer would probably be contend with a return to normalcy.
psychotrip wrote: »psychotrip wrote: »The idea that countless adventurers, soldiers, and all the commoners living and fighting alongside the argonians will just accept tossing their comrades back to the slave pits is...disturbing to say the least. Reluctantly or not, it doesnt make it any less sick.
Its not like the Tribunal control the dunmer's minds, either. We had an entire game about what happens when people begin to question the Temple's legitimacy. You'd think the Tribunal would be a lot more sensitive to the fact that many of their own soldiers fought side by side with the very people they're being forced to put back into chains. What must that be like for both parties?
There is no law against free Argonians existing in Morrowind, so I don't think soldiers would be tasked with re-enslaving them. Private slave hunter organizations still exist during the Pact. Given they can now openly raid the other alliances, possibly not even fewer in number. Many free Argonians would then start losing their precarious and underpaid enployment due to an resurgance of cheap slave labour, and either leave or find themselves in a vulnerable position to be enslaved again themselves.
Unless you're an absolutely selfish argonian, I fail to see the real difference here. How would any of the argonians feel seeing their own people reduced to sub-human slaves after all their hard work for the pact? It just leaves me wondering if, lore-wise, the Pact was even a smart idea for Argonians to begin with. They seem to just be getting used, and from what I remember of the Stonefalls questline that Varanis brought up, the dunmer really dont make a good case for themselves. Why are they even still allies? It seems they should've just left after the Akaviri invasion.
psychotrip wrote: »psychotrip wrote: »The idea that countless adventurers, soldiers, and all the commoners living and fighting alongside the argonians will just accept tossing their comrades back to the slave pits is...disturbing to say the least. Reluctantly or not, it doesnt make it any less sick.
Its not like the Tribunal control the dunmer's minds, either. We had an entire game about what happens when people begin to question the Temple's legitimacy. You'd think the Tribunal would be a lot more sensitive to the fact that many of their own soldiers fought side by side with the very people they're being forced to put back into chains. What must that be like for both parties?
There is no law against free Argonians existing in Morrowind, so I don't think soldiers would be tasked with re-enslaving them. Private slave hunter organizations still exist during the Pact. Given they can now openly raid the other alliances, possibly not even fewer in number. Many free Argonians would then start losing their precarious and underpaid enployment due to an resurgance of cheap slave labour, and either leave or find themselves in a vulnerable position to be enslaved again themselves.
Unless you're an absolutely selfish argonian, I fail to see the real difference here. How would any of the argonians feel seeing their own people reduced to sub-human slaves after all their hard work for the pact? It just leaves me wondering if, lore-wise, the Pact was even a smart idea for Argonians to begin with. They seem to just be getting used, and from what I remember of the Stonefalls questline that Varanis brought up, the dunmer really dont make a good case for themselves. Why are they even still allies? It seems they should've just left after the Akaviri invasion.
I don't think the Argonians allying the Dunmer is well justified from their perspective - they did it for gameplay reasons. I just don't think things mostly reverting to how they were before is so unbelievable, without requiring Dunmer to be inherently more evil than other peoples.
psychotrip wrote: »psychotrip wrote: »psychotrip wrote: »The idea that countless adventurers, soldiers, and all the commoners living and fighting alongside the argonians will just accept tossing their comrades back to the slave pits is...disturbing to say the least. Reluctantly or not, it doesnt make it any less sick.
Its not like the Tribunal control the dunmer's minds, either. We had an entire game about what happens when people begin to question the Temple's legitimacy. You'd think the Tribunal would be a lot more sensitive to the fact that many of their own soldiers fought side by side with the very people they're being forced to put back into chains. What must that be like for both parties?
There is no law against free Argonians existing in Morrowind, so I don't think soldiers would be tasked with re-enslaving them. Private slave hunter organizations still exist during the Pact. Given they can now openly raid the other alliances, possibly not even fewer in number. Many free Argonians would then start losing their precarious and underpaid enployment due to an resurgance of cheap slave labour, and either leave or find themselves in a vulnerable position to be enslaved again themselves.
Unless you're an absolutely selfish argonian, I fail to see the real difference here. How would any of the argonians feel seeing their own people reduced to sub-human slaves after all their hard work for the pact? It just leaves me wondering if, lore-wise, the Pact was even a smart idea for Argonians to begin with. They seem to just be getting used, and from what I remember of the Stonefalls questline that Varanis brought up, the dunmer really dont make a good case for themselves. Why are they even still allies? It seems they should've just left after the Akaviri invasion.
I don't think the Argonians allying the Dunmer is well justified from their perspective - they did it for gameplay reasons. I just don't think things mostly reverting to how they were before is so unbelievable, without requiring Dunmer to be inherently more evil than other peoples.
But it does, doesn't it? Like, how does it not?
We're talking about a single generation of people fighting side by side with argonians, strategizing together, dying together on the battlefield, being forced to see them as intelligent people instead of sub-sentient animals...only to all collectively betray them and put their people back in chains, despite all the proof in front of them that Argonians are valuable allies and friends.
If any race in ESO is worse than that, then that's more of an indictment on the writing than an absolution of the dunmer.
psychotrip wrote: »psychotrip wrote: »psychotrip wrote: »The idea that countless adventurers, soldiers, and all the commoners living and fighting alongside the argonians will just accept tossing their comrades back to the slave pits is...disturbing to say the least. Reluctantly or not, it doesnt make it any less sick.
Its not like the Tribunal control the dunmer's minds, either. We had an entire game about what happens when people begin to question the Temple's legitimacy. You'd think the Tribunal would be a lot more sensitive to the fact that many of their own soldiers fought side by side with the very people they're being forced to put back into chains. What must that be like for both parties?
There is no law against free Argonians existing in Morrowind, so I don't think soldiers would be tasked with re-enslaving them. Private slave hunter organizations still exist during the Pact. Given they can now openly raid the other alliances, possibly not even fewer in number. Many free Argonians would then start losing their precarious and underpaid enployment due to an resurgance of cheap slave labour, and either leave or find themselves in a vulnerable position to be enslaved again themselves.
Unless you're an absolutely selfish argonian, I fail to see the real difference here. How would any of the argonians feel seeing their own people reduced to sub-human slaves after all their hard work for the pact? It just leaves me wondering if, lore-wise, the Pact was even a smart idea for Argonians to begin with. They seem to just be getting used, and from what I remember of the Stonefalls questline that Varanis brought up, the dunmer really dont make a good case for themselves. Why are they even still allies? It seems they should've just left after the Akaviri invasion.
I don't think the Argonians allying the Dunmer is well justified from their perspective - they did it for gameplay reasons. I just don't think things mostly reverting to how they were before is so unbelievable, without requiring Dunmer to be inherently more evil than other peoples.
But it does, doesn't it? Like, how does it not?
We're talking about a single generation of people fighting side by side with argonians, strategizing together, dying together on the battlefield, being forced to see them as intelligent people instead of sub-sentient animals...only to all collectively betray them and put their people back in chains, despite all the proof in front of them that Argonians are valuable allies and friends.
If any race in ESO is worse than that, then that's more of an indictment on the writing than an absolution of the dunmer.
The Dunmer soldiers have loyalties to their great houses which are dominated by people who don't view Argonians as fully human, let alone elven, and who only ever cooperated with them at the tribunal's behest. Since these common soldiers also don't have much individual social or economic power, such spread loyalties could easily mean they'll just go along with whatever their house decides. Humans can get pretty nasty towards supposed friends when their loaylties are tested, and these are actual different species we're talking about, not just the "races" humans like to think up.
psychotrip wrote: »VaranisArano wrote: »
As for the Dunmer, the only reason some of the Houses gave up their Argonian slaves was because the Tribunal said so. Once the Tribunal says "Slavery's back on the menu, boys!" they'll fall all over themselves to start up the raiding parties
again (not that they ever entirely stopped).
I'm not sure it's cartoonish to revert so quickly. Is it really reverting when it's clear that many Dunmer haven't really changed?
Then why did any argonians align with them? You're kinda making my point here. The Dunmer (and especially the Tribunal) come off as objectively evil and duplicitous by doing this. The idea that countless adventurers, soldiers, and all the commoners living and fighting alongside the argonians will just accept tossing their comrades back to the slave pits is...disturbing to say the least. Reluctantly or not, it doesnt make it any less sick.
Its not like the Tribunal control the dunmer's minds, either. We had an entire game about what happens when people begin to question the Temple's legitimacy. You'd think the Tribunal would be a lot more sensitive to the fact that many of their own soldiers fought side by side with the very people they're being forced to put back into chains. What must that be like for both parties?
As for the Argonians that sided with the Dunmer...I dont even wanna think about what it's gonna be like for them.
For real though, the more you try to imagine this transition happening, the more disturbing it becomes.
VaranisArano wrote: »psychotrip wrote: »VaranisArano wrote: »
As for the Dunmer, the only reason some of the Houses gave up their Argonian slaves was because the Tribunal said so. Once the Tribunal says "Slavery's back on the menu, boys!" they'll fall all over themselves to start up the raiding parties
again (not that they ever entirely stopped).
I'm not sure it's cartoonish to revert so quickly. Is it really reverting when it's clear that many Dunmer haven't really changed?
Then why did any argonians align with them? You're kinda making my point here. The Dunmer (and especially the Tribunal) come off as objectively evil and duplicitous by doing this. The idea that countless adventurers, soldiers, and all the commoners living and fighting alongside the argonians will just accept tossing their comrades back to the slave pits is...disturbing to say the least. Reluctantly or not, it doesnt make it any less sick.
Its not like the Tribunal control the dunmer's minds, either. We had an entire game about what happens when people begin to question the Temple's legitimacy. You'd think the Tribunal would be a lot more sensitive to the fact that many of their own soldiers fought side by side with the very people they're being forced to put back into chains. What must that be like for both parties?
As for the Argonians that sided with the Dunmer...I dont even wanna think about what it's gonna be like for them.
For real though, the more you try to imagine this transition happening, the more disturbing it becomes.
I'd like to preface any continuing discussion with this: ZOS needed three alliances for their PVP Realm vRealm vRealm mode. AD is a historical alliance in the lore, the Daggerfall Covenant at least has geography in common, and that leaves the hereditary enemies of Dunmer, Nords, and Argonians to get smushed together. The Pact is ludicrous. Yet it's Canon, so I'm going to take it seriously according to what canon lore says about it.
If this is all an axe-grinding session about how ludicrous the Pact is, I already know. Too bad, it's canon now.
Also, wall o' text coming. Sorry.
...................
Yes, it's very disturbing to think about what's going to happen to the Argonians when the Pact dissolves. It is a tragedy.
But we know it happens. So it's clear that no matter what individual Dunmer feel about it, it doesn't make a difference in the big picture. Slavery is back on until the last years of the 3rd Era.
Yes, this does paint plenty of Dunmer as objectively evil and duplicitous.
I'm sorry, but I don't expect a culture that split from the Aldmer to worship the gods of lies, sex, plots, prophecies, and murder to be pleasant people. The Dunmer in ESO haven't stopped enslaving people. Okay, there's some Vvardenfell propaganda that say the Pact has, but there's more quests in the Pact zones that say they haven't stopped enslaving non-Argonians and war prisoners. The Dunmer of Morrowind are racist, nationalist, xenophobic slavers - or at the very least raised in a culture that values those qualities. That's consistent from TES 3 to ESO, and the only difference in their portrayal in Skyrim is that the Dunmer have had stopped taking slaves after having some of the stuffing kicked out of them by the Argonians and the Tribunal's obvious failure.
I repeat my refrain, "Wow. Dunmer are jerks." (I'd say worse, but you know, the mods might not appreciate it.) As a Dunmer fan myself, I feel like there are way too many TES fans who forget that "fan-favorite protagonist" does not equal "objectively good guy."
The Tribunal...I'm sorry again, but they are objectively evil and duplicitous people with excellent publicity. That was kind of the point of TES 3 and the Tribunal DLC, and we see that again in their ESO appearances.
Frankly, I don't think they care if a relative few Dunmer get cold feet. Any organized rebellion will be crushed by the Three Living Gods of Morrowind at the height of their power and the military/economic might of the Houses that are happy to go back to full slavery (Which is all of them; Hlaalu and Dres have big plantations, Indoril likely does and they'll do what the Tribunal says, and let's not forget that Redoran had a big slave market in Balmora. They are all rotten to the core .)
As for why some Argonians sided with the Pact, this is also well established in the Pact zones and the lore.
There are several Pact-aligned Argonians who want to push for a more advanced Saxheel society similar to the one that was capable of erecting the Xanmeers. But in order to do so, they need a period of relative peace in Black Marsh where they can build up their defenses/armies where they aren't being raided. To that end, they assist the Nords and Dunmer in fighting against the Akaviri, create a defensive Pact, and thus guarantee the security of Black Marsh as long as the Pact survives.
https://en.uesp.net/wiki/Lore:Heita-Meen
https://en.uesp.net/wiki/Lore:Keshu
https://en.uesp.net/wiki/Online:Walks-in-Ash
It doesn't end up working out in the long run, but that's not because Keshu and the others are stupid to form the Pact. Rather as we've seen in successive Argonian content like Murkmire and Blackwood, most Argonians simply aren't interested in having a more advanced society than they already have. So even though the Pact is partially successful in ending most slaver raids and protecting the Hist from Dominion invasion, there's just not a lot of grass-roots support from the many different Black Marsh tribes that it would take to capitalize on that period of peace to advance their civilization to the point that they could withstand the inevitable dissolution of the Pact.
The Pact-aligned Argonians weren't stupid. They knew the Pact wasn't going to last, and basically gambled that they could keep it going long enough to advance Black Marsh enough that they could defend themselves after it fell apart. They lost the gamble, mostly because so many tribes just didn't share their goals.
psychotrip wrote: »VaranisArano wrote: »psychotrip wrote: »VaranisArano wrote: »
As for the Dunmer, the only reason some of the Houses gave up their Argonian slaves was because the Tribunal said so. Once the Tribunal says "Slavery's back on the menu, boys!" they'll fall all over themselves to start up the raiding parties
again (not that they ever entirely stopped).
I'm not sure it's cartoonish to revert so quickly. Is it really reverting when it's clear that many Dunmer haven't really changed?
Then why did any argonians align with them? You're kinda making my point here. The Dunmer (and especially the Tribunal) come off as objectively evil and duplicitous by doing this. The idea that countless adventurers, soldiers, and all the commoners living and fighting alongside the argonians will just accept tossing their comrades back to the slave pits is...disturbing to say the least. Reluctantly or not, it doesnt make it any less sick.
Its not like the Tribunal control the dunmer's minds, either. We had an entire game about what happens when people begin to question the Temple's legitimacy. You'd think the Tribunal would be a lot more sensitive to the fact that many of their own soldiers fought side by side with the very people they're being forced to put back into chains. What must that be like for both parties?
As for the Argonians that sided with the Dunmer...I dont even wanna think about what it's gonna be like for them.
For real though, the more you try to imagine this transition happening, the more disturbing it becomes.
I'd like to preface any continuing discussion with this: ZOS needed three alliances for their PVP Realm vRealm vRealm mode. AD is a historical alliance in the lore, the Daggerfall Covenant at least has geography in common, and that leaves the hereditary enemies of Dunmer, Nords, and Argonians to get smushed together. The Pact is ludicrous. Yet it's Canon, so I'm going to take it seriously according to what canon lore says about it.
If this is all an axe-grinding session about how ludicrous the Pact is, I already know. Too bad, it's canon now.
Also, wall o' text coming. Sorry.
...................
Yes, it's very disturbing to think about what's going to happen to the Argonians when the Pact dissolves. It is a tragedy.
But we know it happens. So it's clear that no matter what individual Dunmer feel about it, it doesn't make a difference in the big picture. Slavery is back on until the last years of the 3rd Era.
Yes, this does paint plenty of Dunmer as objectively evil and duplicitous.
I'm sorry, but I don't expect a culture that split from the Aldmer to worship the gods of lies, sex, plots, prophecies, and murder to be pleasant people. The Dunmer in ESO haven't stopped enslaving people. Okay, there's some Vvardenfell propaganda that say the Pact has, but there's more quests in the Pact zones that say they haven't stopped enslaving non-Argonians and war prisoners. The Dunmer of Morrowind are racist, nationalist, xenophobic slavers - or at the very least raised in a culture that values those qualities. That's consistent from TES 3 to ESO, and the only difference in their portrayal in Skyrim is that the Dunmer have had stopped taking slaves after having some of the stuffing kicked out of them by the Argonians and the Tribunal's obvious failure.
I repeat my refrain, "Wow. Dunmer are jerks." (I'd say worse, but you know, the mods might not appreciate it.) As a Dunmer fan myself, I feel like there are way too many TES fans who forget that "fan-favorite protagonist" does not equal "objectively good guy."
The Tribunal...I'm sorry again, but they are objectively evil and duplicitous people with excellent publicity. That was kind of the point of TES 3 and the Tribunal DLC, and we see that again in their ESO appearances.
Frankly, I don't think they care if a relative few Dunmer get cold feet. Any organized rebellion will be crushed by the Three Living Gods of Morrowind at the height of their power and the military/economic might of the Houses that are happy to go back to full slavery (Which is all of them; Hlaalu and Dres have big plantations, Indoril likely does and they'll do what the Tribunal says, and let's not forget that Redoran had a big slave market in Balmora. They are all rotten to the core .)
As for why some Argonians sided with the Pact, this is also well established in the Pact zones and the lore.
There are several Pact-aligned Argonians who want to push for a more advanced Saxheel society similar to the one that was capable of erecting the Xanmeers. But in order to do so, they need a period of relative peace in Black Marsh where they can build up their defenses/armies where they aren't being raided. To that end, they assist the Nords and Dunmer in fighting against the Akaviri, create a defensive Pact, and thus guarantee the security of Black Marsh as long as the Pact survives.
https://en.uesp.net/wiki/Lore:Heita-Meen
https://en.uesp.net/wiki/Lore:Keshu
https://en.uesp.net/wiki/Online:Walks-in-Ash
It doesn't end up working out in the long run, but that's not because Keshu and the others are stupid to form the Pact. Rather as we've seen in successive Argonian content like Murkmire and Blackwood, most Argonians simply aren't interested in having a more advanced society than they already have. So even though the Pact is partially successful in ending most slaver raids and protecting the Hist from Dominion invasion, there's just not a lot of grass-roots support from the many different Black Marsh tribes that it would take to capitalize on that period of peace to advance their civilization to the point that they could withstand the inevitable dissolution of the Pact.
The Pact-aligned Argonians weren't stupid. They knew the Pact wasn't going to last, and basically gambled that they could keep it going long enough to advance Black Marsh enough that they could defend themselves after it fell apart. They lost the gamble, mostly because so many tribes just didn't share their goals.
Well articulated points, as usual. Glad we both agree that the pact exists to justify a convenient 3 faction war. Thats kind of the original sin of this game imo. I would've been happy with arena pvp and some specific, lore-appropriate battlegrounds. Instead they pushed the franchise in a direction no one asked for, and didn't even do it well *laughs in Cyrodiil*.
I cant argue with your points about the dunmer. As you know the Altmer and Redguards are my favorites (both less so now thanks to ESO) so bias isnt my issue here. My issue isnt that the dunmer are "bad guys". It's how hollow, pointless, even nihilistic their "badness" has become.
TES3 paints them in a negative light, but they also paint the empire in a negative light. Both were perceived as deeply broken societies that MAY be worth saving.
I dont want to save the dunmer anymore.
VaranisArano wrote: »psychotrip wrote: »VaranisArano wrote: »psychotrip wrote: »VaranisArano wrote: »
As for the Dunmer, the only reason some of the Houses gave up their Argonian slaves was because the Tribunal said so. Once the Tribunal says "Slavery's back on the menu, boys!" they'll fall all over themselves to start up the raiding parties
again (not that they ever entirely stopped).
I'm not sure it's cartoonish to revert so quickly. Is it really reverting when it's clear that many Dunmer haven't really changed?
Then why did any argonians align with them? You're kinda making my point here. The Dunmer (and especially the Tribunal) come off as objectively evil and duplicitous by doing this. The idea that countless adventurers, soldiers, and all the commoners living and fighting alongside the argonians will just accept tossing their comrades back to the slave pits is...disturbing to say the least. Reluctantly or not, it doesnt make it any less sick.
Its not like the Tribunal control the dunmer's minds, either. We had an entire game about what happens when people begin to question the Temple's legitimacy. You'd think the Tribunal would be a lot more sensitive to the fact that many of their own soldiers fought side by side with the very people they're being forced to put back into chains. What must that be like for both parties?
As for the Argonians that sided with the Dunmer...I dont even wanna think about what it's gonna be like for them.
For real though, the more you try to imagine this transition happening, the more disturbing it becomes.
I'd like to preface any continuing discussion with this: ZOS needed three alliances for their PVP Realm vRealm vRealm mode. AD is a historical alliance in the lore, the Daggerfall Covenant at least has geography in common, and that leaves the hereditary enemies of Dunmer, Nords, and Argonians to get smushed together. The Pact is ludicrous. Yet it's Canon, so I'm going to take it seriously according to what canon lore says about it.
If this is all an axe-grinding session about how ludicrous the Pact is, I already know. Too bad, it's canon now.
Also, wall o' text coming. Sorry.
...................
Yes, it's very disturbing to think about what's going to happen to the Argonians when the Pact dissolves. It is a tragedy.
But we know it happens. So it's clear that no matter what individual Dunmer feel about it, it doesn't make a difference in the big picture. Slavery is back on until the last years of the 3rd Era.
Yes, this does paint plenty of Dunmer as objectively evil and duplicitous.
I'm sorry, but I don't expect a culture that split from the Aldmer to worship the gods of lies, sex, plots, prophecies, and murder to be pleasant people. The Dunmer in ESO haven't stopped enslaving people. Okay, there's some Vvardenfell propaganda that say the Pact has, but there's more quests in the Pact zones that say they haven't stopped enslaving non-Argonians and war prisoners. The Dunmer of Morrowind are racist, nationalist, xenophobic slavers - or at the very least raised in a culture that values those qualities. That's consistent from TES 3 to ESO, and the only difference in their portrayal in Skyrim is that the Dunmer have had stopped taking slaves after having some of the stuffing kicked out of them by the Argonians and the Tribunal's obvious failure.
I repeat my refrain, "Wow. Dunmer are jerks." (I'd say worse, but you know, the mods might not appreciate it.) As a Dunmer fan myself, I feel like there are way too many TES fans who forget that "fan-favorite protagonist" does not equal "objectively good guy."
The Tribunal...I'm sorry again, but they are objectively evil and duplicitous people with excellent publicity. That was kind of the point of TES 3 and the Tribunal DLC, and we see that again in their ESO appearances.
Frankly, I don't think they care if a relative few Dunmer get cold feet. Any organized rebellion will be crushed by the Three Living Gods of Morrowind at the height of their power and the military/economic might of the Houses that are happy to go back to full slavery (Which is all of them; Hlaalu and Dres have big plantations, Indoril likely does and they'll do what the Tribunal says, and let's not forget that Redoran had a big slave market in Balmora. They are all rotten to the core .)
As for why some Argonians sided with the Pact, this is also well established in the Pact zones and the lore.
There are several Pact-aligned Argonians who want to push for a more advanced Saxheel society similar to the one that was capable of erecting the Xanmeers. But in order to do so, they need a period of relative peace in Black Marsh where they can build up their defenses/armies where they aren't being raided. To that end, they assist the Nords and Dunmer in fighting against the Akaviri, create a defensive Pact, and thus guarantee the security of Black Marsh as long as the Pact survives.
https://en.uesp.net/wiki/Lore:Heita-Meen
https://en.uesp.net/wiki/Lore:Keshu
https://en.uesp.net/wiki/Online:Walks-in-Ash
It doesn't end up working out in the long run, but that's not because Keshu and the others are stupid to form the Pact. Rather as we've seen in successive Argonian content like Murkmire and Blackwood, most Argonians simply aren't interested in having a more advanced society than they already have. So even though the Pact is partially successful in ending most slaver raids and protecting the Hist from Dominion invasion, there's just not a lot of grass-roots support from the many different Black Marsh tribes that it would take to capitalize on that period of peace to advance their civilization to the point that they could withstand the inevitable dissolution of the Pact.
The Pact-aligned Argonians weren't stupid. They knew the Pact wasn't going to last, and basically gambled that they could keep it going long enough to advance Black Marsh enough that they could defend themselves after it fell apart. They lost the gamble, mostly because so many tribes just didn't share their goals.
Well articulated points, as usual. Glad we both agree that the pact exists to justify a convenient 3 faction war. Thats kind of the original sin of this game imo. I would've been happy with arena pvp and some specific, lore-appropriate battlegrounds. Instead they pushed the franchise in a direction no one asked for, and didn't even do it well *laughs in Cyrodiil*.
I cant argue with your points about the dunmer. As you know the Altmer and Redguards are my favorites (both less so now thanks to ESO) so bias isnt my issue here. My issue isnt that the dunmer are "bad guys". It's how hollow, pointless, even nihilistic their "badness" has become.
TES3 paints them in a negative light, but they also paint the empire in a negative light. Both were perceived as deeply broken societies that MAY be worth saving.
I dont want to save the dunmer anymore.
For what it's worth, my Dunmer Vestige winds up in the same depressing boat. My headcanon is that she dies in the course of rebelling against the Tribunal once they reinstate slavery. They basically erase her name from the records in retaliation.
My Dunmer Nerevarine was a little more hopeful about saving them up until Almalexia killed Sotha Sil and tried to frame her for the murder in order to retain her godhood a little longer rather than taking proactive action about Red Year. She saw the writing on the wall and scooted off to Akavir before someone else tried to make her the scapegoat.
- The step towards abolishment is/was very recent and still disliked by many, it doesn't surprise me that it might fall as quickly as it rose. But that doesn't mean it had no effects, maybe (assuming that we are in the same timeline) the ideology of the Pact is what sparkled movements such as the Twin Lamps!Clearly the dunmer are capable of surviving without Argonian slaves, so it's even harder to justify their decision here. I think what really fascinates / frustrates me is that this will all happen within 2 dunmer generations at most.
Whether we like it or not, many of the same dunmer who were willing to abolish argonian slavery are the same people who will accept its reintroduction, reluctantly or otherwise.
- The Hist commanded. Larger forces were/are in play. Who knows what could have happened if the Akaviri weren't successfully defeated?Then why did any argonians align with them?
Assuming that we are in the same timeline of the other games (there is always the possibility of a Dragon Break), they will begin to fall when Cuhlecain comes into play and will be finally buried after Tiber Septim ascends (we can say their demise will come from a "fourth faction" of Nords/Bretons, so to speak).- The step towards abolishment is/was very recent and still disliked by many, it doesn't surprise me that it might fall as quickly as it rose. But that doesn't mean it had no effects, maybe (assuming that we are in the same timeline) the ideology of the Pact is what sparkled movements such as the Twin Lamps!Clearly the dunmer are capable of surviving without Argonian slaves, so it's even harder to justify their decision here. I think what really fascinates / frustrates me is that this will all happen within 2 dunmer generations at most.
Whether we like it or not, many of the same dunmer who were willing to abolish argonian slavery are the same people who will accept its reintroduction, reluctantly or otherwise.- The Hist commanded. Larger forces were/are in play. Who knows what could have happened if the Akaviri weren't successfully defeated?Then why did any argonians align with them?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mr1zImBSLc4&t=96s
:')
psychotrip wrote: »Assuming that we are in the same timeline of the other games (there is always the possibility of a Dragon Break), they will begin to fall when Cuhlecain comes into play and will be finally buried after Tiber Septim ascends (we can say their demise will come from a "fourth faction" of Nords/Bretons, so to speak).- The step towards abolishment is/was very recent and still disliked by many, it doesn't surprise me that it might fall as quickly as it rose. But that doesn't mean it had no effects, maybe (assuming that we are in the same timeline) the ideology of the Pact is what sparkled movements such as the Twin Lamps!Clearly the dunmer are capable of surviving without Argonian slaves, so it's even harder to justify their decision here. I think what really fascinates / frustrates me is that this will all happen within 2 dunmer generations at most.
Whether we like it or not, many of the same dunmer who were willing to abolish argonian slavery are the same people who will accept its reintroduction, reluctantly or otherwise.- The Hist commanded. Larger forces were/are in play. Who knows what could have happened if the Akaviri weren't successfully defeated?Then why did any argonians align with them?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mr1zImBSLc4&t=96s
:')
"Because the hist" has to be the new "because a wizard did it". Eventually it just becomes an excuse for bad writing.
I believe there are a few misconceptions here on how the Ebonheart Pact came to be.
A few things are certainly a bit unclear, but at the core of how these three armies joined forces stand two people: Jorunn Skald-King and Keshu the Black Fin.
Keshu's Argonians didn't just help the Dark Elves on a whim. Jorunn and Keshu were friends, and Keshu owed him a debt for helping to free a friend and others from Dres slavers back when Jorunn travelled Black Marsh as a bard. Lorebooks do allude to hopes beyond that, but the request of a friend she was indebted to is at the core of Keshu leading her legion to Ebonheart.
After the battle then, when prompted how Skyrim and Morrowind could repay for Keshu's assistance, Keshu asked of Almalexia that her people, all Argonian slaves, would be free. Going by the tale of an Argonian 'squire' witness to the talks, the defensive pact between East Skyrim and most of Morrowind was already a clear plan at that time. Almalexia agreed - but only under the stipulation that Keshu herself and her legion would join this new alliance. By the next day, the Ebonheart Pact was a done deal.
Heita-Meen was mentioned, and was there, too, of course - but let's be clear: She was along for the ride with Keshu. She had planned to attack Dunmer at Stormhold and was nabbed by Keshu's people to come fight the Akaviri instead.
That much for the Argonians. A personal story, followed with a chance at freedom, and the weight of East Skyrim under a friend's rule complicating matters for the Dunmer if they ever reneged on their agreement. But why did East Skyrim and Morrowind ally in the first place?
We don't exactly know, but we have a variety of conflicting or dubious information, such as possibly Almalexia calling on the Ash-King instead of Jorunn well before the Akaviri turned to Morrowind, or the West Skyrim report indicating that the Dunmer were well prepared to lead the Akaviri in a fighting retreat into fortified positions where they could hit them from two sides together with the chasing Nord army - which entered Morrowind entirely unopposed. And why did Jorunn know just where to send Keshu? It all suggests earlier cooperation between the Skald-King and Almalexia.
To me, I see two possibilities: One, East Skyrim and Morrowind were already set on a defensive alliance, simply down due to geopolitical realities - a hostile West Skyrim, a belligerent Cyrodiil under the Longhouse Dynasty and constant slave revolts and guerilla warfare stemming from Keshu and other Argonians. The Daggerfall Covenant was also already reforged, with Emeric having just done away with his main rival Ranser, adding the orcs of Wrothgar into an unlikely alliance with the explicit desire to restore an Empire without Reachmen at the helm. Now, Jorunn wasn't King before the Akaviri assault on Windhelm - but he could have inherited that design from his predecessors, or Jorunn had prewarning from the Tribunal's prophetic powers.
The second option expands on that last bit: It was Almalexia's plan all along. The Tribunal has no interest in repeating the likes of the Fourscore War, ultimatively successful as their defence had been. Getting Skyrim and northern Black Marsh into her pockets provides both a buffer against all land assaults aside a short border towards Cyrodiil that she could reinforce with foreign bodies, and letting her historical enemies and slaves bleed for Morrowind sits alright with her. It does away with the increasing trouble of slave revolts and secures that the Nords would not join forces with the Covenant or with Cyrodiil should a non-Reachman ever return to power. Under this assumption, she did indeed summon the Ash-King, and effectively put Jorunn in power over both East Skyrim and as the commander-in-chief of the Pact as her sockpuppet. Keshu asking for slaves to be released may have been unforeseen - the account of the meeting has her hesitate - but it's ultimately a minor price to temporarily pay in the long-reaching designs of a Living God. Argonian slaves can be replaced (I'm dead-certain some were just traded for Khajiit with the Telvanni or transferred into pro-forma indentured servitude and wage-slavery) and the effects mitigated. Overall, she wins on nearly every account. Is it coincidence that Jorunn doesn't command from Windhelm, but from her city, Mournhold? That he sent his boy to High Isle while Almalexia continues to whisper into his ear? Does Jorunn feel like a ruler to you?
Now - that was speculation. But both options have two underlying core facts:
- Personal relationships unbound by racial dislike
- Strategically, it makes sense for all three parties.
The last I can't stress enough. As the saying goes, nations have interests and rivals, not friends or foes. All three had due reason for shoring up their security.
How long the Pact survives once Tamriel quietens down is another question. And to lead back to the OP there, I think the Pact falls when it runs out of unifying threats, because then those geopolitical realities disappear.
You uh, argue with the future to explain the present and ignored half of what I wrote.
Every specific question you have is adressed in my post.
The most relevant aspects you need to realize however are these: 'The Argonians' didn't ally with anyone. East Skyrim and most of Morrowind did, and 'one Argonian guerilla and her followers' did to try and free their kin from slavery. Several more tribes followed later when it was clear that slaves were indeed being freed.
- Starting another war right after they barely won one sounds costly and tiresome. Not to mention having to face the Tribunal. A diplomatic approach seems more reasonable.Or even go to war with Morrowind over slavery while they were weak?
- Well, the Tribunal probably wants more influence, and it would be good for the Dunmer to be free to maintain their cultural independence/Daedra worship without having to worry about the Empire. The Nords probably wouldn't be very happy about the Dominion, or even the Covenant, seizing the Ruby Throne. The Argonians I agree they have the least interest in this war, I guess they may see it as an opportunity to keep free from slavery and outlaw it for good once the Pact claims the Ruby Throne.What do they get out of this war in cyrodiil?
- Starting another war right after they barely won one sounds costly and tiresome. Not to mention having to face the Tribunal. A diplomatic approach seems more reasonable.Or even go to war with Morrowind over slavery while they were weak?- Well, the Tribunal probably wants more influence, and it would be good for the Dunmer to be free to maintain their cultural independence/Daedra worship without having to worry about the Empire. The Nords probably wouldn't be very happy about the Dominion, or even the Covenant, seizing the Ruby Throne. The Argonians I agree they have the least interest in this war, I guess they may see it as an opportunity to outlaw slavery for good once the Pact claims the Ruby Throne.What do they get out of this war in cyrodiil?
- Starting another war right after they barely won one sounds costly and tiresome. Not to mention having to face the Tribunal. A diplomatic approach seems more reasonable.Or even go to war with Morrowind over slavery while they were weak?- Well, the Tribunal probably wants more influence, and it would be good for the Dunmer to be free to maintain their cultural independence/Daedra worship without having to worry about the Empire. The Nords probably wouldn't be very happy about the Dominion, or even the Covenant, seizing the Ruby Throne. The Argonians I agree they have the least interest in this war, I guess they may see it as an opportunity to keep free from slavery and outlaw it for good once the Pact claims the Ruby Throne.What do they get out of this war in cyrodiil?
They allied with Jorunn first and foremost, with immediate positive effect: freedom for their kin.
The only risk was the alliance failing and slavery to return, but that was the Status Quo already. It was the best shot the enslaved ever had. That was the reality. At worst, things would be as they already were. As of ESO time, things have already been better than that for a decade, and chances are it'll last another few until it all crumbles. Until then, Keshu has brought many freed slaves south in the hopes of creating a new open, free Argonia from Gideon.
I'm not even sure what your attempted link to 'the war in Cyrodiil' should be. That happened well after.
I think you need to read up on a timeline, and what's happening in Cyrodiil. Either way, it's not related to the formation of the Pact.
psychotrip wrote: »You uh, argue with the future to explain the present and ignored half of what I wrote.
Every specific question you have is adressed in my post.
The most relevant aspects you need to realize however are these: 'The Argonians' didn't ally with anyone. East Skyrim and most of Morrowind did, and 'one Argonian guerilla and her followers' did to try and free their kin from slavery. Several more tribes followed later when it was clear that slaves were indeed being freed.
I didnt ignore anything. I just dont find the answers satisfying. I know not all argonians sided with Keshu. I'm talking about those that did, and it doesn't make sense to me. Yes, I'm using the future to criticize present decisions, because it shows that it was provably the wrong decision to make. Even without hindsight it should have been obvious that the dunmer would betray them. So what was it all for? I dont get what they're accomplishing here. A brief period of freedom in return for their lives? How is that the best option here.
Maybe I'm missing something, but I read your whole post and it just feels like they were writing backward to justify a gameplay choice, and they left behind a lot of poorly answered questions in doing so.
And finally, NPCs are allowed to be wrong in hindsight, just like real people in history. There's plenty of examples of well-intentioned reformers who tried to pull their country out of the past with dramatically mixed results. Keshu's efforts are ultimately futile, but no less interesting in the present in ESO. For us, she's a tragic character because we know that her idealism ends badly.