CaptainVenom wrote: »He wanted to be a Dragonborn/Dovahkiin, not a dragon.But if you mean selecting him to die and power up the Amulet of Kings because it's HIS fault, then yes. It is more than fair.
MythicEmperor wrote: »Yes. That's why I sacrificed him; he needed to pay for his actions.
I don't blame him. As I understand it he was the legitimate emperor in every other way and if he had conquered anywhere except Tamriel (or had done it before Alessia formed the pact with Akatosh or after Martin permanently ended it) that would have been the end of things. It was just this one relatively obscure tradition (we're told in Oblivion that very few people know the significance of the Amulet of Kings and the Dragonfires) that stood in his way. So it's understandable he wanted to fix it.
And at the time Mannimarco was one of his closest friends and advisors, someone he had already trusted with his life and thought he could trust with anything. He was also supposed to be the resident expert on all things magical, far more knowledgeable about this stuff than Varen. So it's understandable he was willing to trust the guy with this too.
How many times have you, in the course of playing an Elder Scrolls Game used some artifact you've only just heard of to complete a ritual you don't fully understand because some mage said you should? How many times have you done something you didn't really understand in real life because an expert or a friend (or both) told you that you should and you trusted them to give you good advice?
I can't honestly say I'd do any different if I was in his situation. I just hope I'd have the guts to put it right afterwards. (And more importantly that I never screw anything up so badly that it could destroy the world.)