EposSilver wrote: »To what point and purpose did you change the names of the motifs from their racial names, (Altmer, Dunmer), to common names, (High Elf, Dark Elf)? It's not THAT big a deal, but for those of us that have been playing Elder Scrolls since Arena, Daggerfall, and Battlespire, it kinda ruins some of the lore and immersion for the game...
EposSilver wrote: »To what point and purpose did you change the names of the motifs from their racial names, (Altmer, Dunmer), to common names, (High Elf, Dark Elf)? It's not THAT big a deal, but for those of us that have been playing Elder Scrolls since Arena, Daggerfall, and Battlespire, it kinda ruins some of the lore and immersion for the game...
I'm totally with you man. I LOVE this franchise. Happy Fredas...
Yeah I'm pretty certain they've been that way since live. The lore books themselves read Racial Motifs 1: The High Elves,... etc.I was not aware they ever had different names. Shows how much I care. Anyway, high elf, wood elf etc. are perfectly lore-friendly terms. It's how humans in Tamriel call these races.
theroyalestpythonnub18_ESO wrote: »Yeah I'm pretty certain they've been that way since live. The lore books themselves read Racial Motifs 1: The High Elves,... etc.I was not aware they ever had different names. Shows how much I care. Anyway, high elf, wood elf etc. are perfectly lore-friendly terms. It's how humans in Tamriel call these races.
...not sure what the issue is.
EposSilver wrote: »To what point and purpose did you change the names of the motifs from their racial names, (Altmer, Dunmer), to common names, (High Elf, Dark Elf)? It's not THAT big a deal, but for those of us that have been playing Elder Scrolls since Arena, Daggerfall, and Battlespire, it kinda ruins some of the lore and immersion for the game...

As far as I remember both names are used interchangeably by characters in all the TES games. Even members of those races will use the 'human names' sometimes (e.g. dunmer calling themselves dark elves).
So they're both equally lore friendly, just different languages.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRhdlk4kK-4 EposSilver wrote: »To what point and purpose did you change the names of the motifs from their racial names, (Altmer, Dunmer), to common names, (High Elf, Dark Elf)? It's not THAT big a deal, but for those of us that have been playing Elder Scrolls since Arena, Daggerfall, and Battlespire, it kinda ruins some of the lore and immersion for the game...
EposSilver wrote: »To what point and purpose did you change the names of the motifs from their racial names, (Altmer, Dunmer), to common names, (High Elf, Dark Elf)? It's not THAT big a deal, but for those of us that have been playing Elder Scrolls since Arena, Daggerfall, and Battlespire, it kinda ruins some of the lore and immersion for the game...
But the terms have been interchangeable with each other since Morrowind at least. I'm pretty sure it goes all the way back. They still use the terms "mer" and all the various additives like Dun or Orsi, so there isn't anything to worry about.
EposSilver wrote: »To what point and purpose did you change the names of the motifs from their racial names, (Altmer, Dunmer), to common names, (High Elf, Dark Elf)? It's not THAT big a deal, but for those of us that have been playing Elder Scrolls since Arena, Daggerfall, and Battlespire, it kinda ruins some of the lore and immersion for the game...
But the terms have been interchangeable with each other since Morrowind at least. I'm pretty sure it goes all the way back. They still use the terms "mer" and all the various additives like Dun or Orsi, so there isn't anything to worry about.
EposSilver wrote: »To what point and purpose did you change the names of the motifs from their racial names, (Altmer, Dunmer), to common names, (High Elf, Dark Elf)? It's not THAT big a deal, but for those of us that have been playing Elder Scrolls since Arena, Daggerfall, and Battlespire, it kinda ruins some of the lore and immersion for the game...
But the terms have been interchangeable with each other since Morrowind at least. I'm pretty sure it goes all the way back. They still use the terms "mer" and all the various additives like Dun or Orsi, so there isn't anything to worry about.
Sure they've been interchangeable, but how does it makes sense in context of Motifs? What would the rationalization be to change the name of the Motif?
And it's actually interesting how few times Orcs are actually called Orsimer.
EposSilver wrote: »To what point and purpose did you change the names of the motifs from their racial names, (Altmer, Dunmer), to common names, (High Elf, Dark Elf)? It's not THAT big a deal, but for those of us that have been playing Elder Scrolls since Arena, Daggerfall, and Battlespire, it kinda ruins some of the lore and immersion for the game...
But the terms have been interchangeable with each other since Morrowind at least. I'm pretty sure it goes all the way back. They still use the terms "mer" and all the various additives like Dun or Orsi, so there isn't anything to worry about.
Have they actually been interchangeable though? I am sure I remember are least a few Dunmer who strongly objected to being called "Dark Elf" and even had a discussion option relating directly to that.
So perhaps this is more a question of whether the Motif books would carry those names because that is what their author would have used... rather than what the people actually call themselves.
EposSilver wrote: »To what point and purpose did you change the names of the motifs from their racial names, (Altmer, Dunmer), to common names, (High Elf, Dark Elf)? It's not THAT big a deal, but for those of us that have been playing Elder Scrolls since Arena, Daggerfall, and Battlespire, it kinda ruins some of the lore and immersion for the game...
But the terms have been interchangeable with each other since Morrowind at least. I'm pretty sure it goes all the way back. They still use the terms "mer" and all the various additives like Dun or Orsi, so there isn't anything to worry about.
Sure they've been interchangeable, but how does it makes sense in context of Motifs? What would the rationalization be to change the name of the Motif?
And it's actually interesting how few times Orcs are actually called Orsimer.
Easy, either the author ( presume an Imperial based on her name) or the publisher changed the title to better accommodate a wider reading audience. Even within the works themselves (let us not forget that the motif books are just that, books you can read) the words Mer and Elf are freely interchanged. Here is the link to the full current collection.
In a stunning twist of fate or poetic provenance, the in-game and out-of-game reason for changing the book titles are one in the same.
EposSilver wrote: »To what point and purpose did you change the names of the motifs from their racial names, (Altmer, Dunmer), to common names, (High Elf, Dark Elf)? It's not THAT big a deal, but for those of us that have been playing Elder Scrolls since Arena, Daggerfall, and Battlespire, it kinda ruins some of the lore and immersion for the game...
But the terms have been interchangeable with each other since Morrowind at least. I'm pretty sure it goes all the way back. They still use the terms "mer" and all the various additives like Dun or Orsi, so there isn't anything to worry about.
Sure they've been interchangeable, but how does it makes sense in context of Motifs? What would the rationalization be to change the name of the Motif?
And it's actually interesting how few times Orcs are actually called Orsimer.
Easy, either the author ( presume an Imperial based on her name) or the publisher changed the title to better accommodate a wider reading audience. Even within the works themselves (let us not forget that the motif books are just that, books you can read) the words Mer and Elf are freely interchanged. Here is the link to the full current collection.
In a stunning twist of fate or poetic provenance, the in-game and out-of-game reason for changing the book titles are one in the same.
Thanks for the link! I agree it's a small thing to change. My concern is kind of more along the lines that they are spending time on changing things like this... Wonder why they didn't change Dwemer to Dwarves.
They didn't change anything. The motifs have always said "High Elf, Wood Elf, Dark Elf, Orc," at least since the public Beta. Either OP is confused, or we're all misinterpreting their meaning.EposSilver wrote: »To what point and purpose did you change the names of the motifs from their racial names, (Altmer, Dunmer), to common names, (High Elf, Dark Elf)? It's not THAT big a deal, but for those of us that have been playing Elder Scrolls since Arena, Daggerfall, and Battlespire, it kinda ruins some of the lore and immersion for the game...
But the terms have been interchangeable with each other since Morrowind at least. I'm pretty sure it goes all the way back. They still use the terms "mer" and all the various additives like Dun or Orsi, so there isn't anything to worry about.
Sure they've been interchangeable, but how does it makes sense in context of Motifs? What would the rationalization be to change the name of the Motif?
And it's actually interesting how few times Orcs are actually called Orsimer.
Easy, either the author ( presume an Imperial based on her name) or the publisher changed the title to better accommodate a wider reading audience. Even within the works themselves (let us not forget that the motif books are just that, books you can read) the words Mer and Elf are freely interchanged. Here is the link to the full current collection.
In a stunning twist of fate or poetic provenance, the in-game and out-of-game reason for changing the book titles are one in the same.
Thanks for the link! I agree it's a small thing to change. My concern is kind of more along the lines that they are spending time on changing things like this... Wonder why they didn't change Dwemer to Dwarves.
theroyalestpythonnub18_ESO wrote: »They didn't change anything. The motifs have always said "High Elf, Wood Elf, Dark Elf, Orc," at least since the public Beta. Either OP is confused, or we're all misinterpreting their meaning.EposSilver wrote: »To what point and purpose did you change the names of the motifs from their racial names, (Altmer, Dunmer), to common names, (High Elf, Dark Elf)? It's not THAT big a deal, but for those of us that have been playing Elder Scrolls since Arena, Daggerfall, and Battlespire, it kinda ruins some of the lore and immersion for the game...
But the terms have been interchangeable with each other since Morrowind at least. I'm pretty sure it goes all the way back. They still use the terms "mer" and all the various additives like Dun or Orsi, so there isn't anything to worry about.
Sure they've been interchangeable, but how does it makes sense in context of Motifs? What would the rationalization be to change the name of the Motif?
And it's actually interesting how few times Orcs are actually called Orsimer.
Easy, either the author ( presume an Imperial based on her name) or the publisher changed the title to better accommodate a wider reading audience. Even within the works themselves (let us not forget that the motif books are just that, books you can read) the words Mer and Elf are freely interchanged. Here is the link to the full current collection.
In a stunning twist of fate or poetic provenance, the in-game and out-of-game reason for changing the book titles are one in the same.
Thanks for the link! I agree it's a small thing to change. My concern is kind of more along the lines that they are spending time on changing things like this... Wonder why they didn't change Dwemer to Dwarves.