MLGProPlayer wrote: »My question is, would the player have been able to just use this energy on themselves to become a god?
MLGProPlayer wrote: »The story didn't give a compelling reason for why I needed to return it to Vivec. He's just some jerk who became a god by stealing the power from an artefact (he doesn't have any right to that power). Is there anything that would have stopped the player from stealing that energy from Vivec?
MLGProPlayer wrote: »And another thought related to Vivec: why did we need Vivec to stop the meteor from falling on Vvardenfell?
MLGProPlayer wrote: »Couldn't Almalexia or Sotha Sil have subbed in to hold it up/destroy it while Vivec is weakened?
MLGProPlayer wrote: »It seemed like a whole lot of drama for something that could have easily been resolved.
Korah_Eaglecry wrote: »Solutions that are at the edge of a blade or the tip of a staff.
starkerealm wrote: »It is. The problem is, all three of the people who could have stopped it didn't, because they're all egocentric idiots. Canonically, egocentric idiots. They went up there, and decided to lick the severed heart of a god, because it sounded like good times. They're lucky that all Azura did was blast their race into a new skin tone. A fact that sails right over their little heads.
When I was reading of Sotha Sil I came across this:
Sotha Sil:
Thieves? An interesting concept. Did we steal the essence of the Divine, or was it given to us freely, that we might lead our people into a new age?
Few called us thieves when by words and by rite the Princes of Oblivion were bound to a truce. Fewer still when Mehrunes Dagon broke that truce and himself was broken on the soil of Mournhold.
The events of Red Mountain happened so long ago. What has Lord Vivec told you about that day? Did he wrap it in riddles, give you an array of possible pasts all leading to the same inevitable future? That is his way.
Do not curse him for this, as this is what he is. A puzzle. The opposition to his own viewpoint.
Almalexia would tell the story best, I think. She of us all was the closest to Nerevar. Lover. Counsel. General. And she of us all wears the mantle of a god most proudly. She has walked among the people and learned their frailties. Learned them well.
Men of god? Gods of men? Which should you fear most?
You wonder where the Dwemer have gone? Perhaps better to wonder why one remains. Even gods dislike the absolute, for it stinks of something larger than themselves.
Still I watch.
from here: https://www.imperial-library.info/content/sotha-sils-last-words
which just made me wonder would this power have been given to them freely.
starkerealm wrote: »It is. The problem is, all three of the people who could have stopped it didn't, because they're all egocentric idiots. Canonically, egocentric idiots. They went up there, and decided to lick the severed heart of a god, because it sounded like good times. They're lucky that all Azura did was blast their race into a new skin tone. A fact that sails right over their little heads.
Woah woah woah, I agree that Vivec and Almalexia are self centered fools who constantly deceive their people, But from all we know Sotha Sil is a good guy. His intention is always to improve the world, at first by leading his people, and later by literally trying to improve the world (by making a better one).
Unlike Almalexia, if asked Sotha SIl probably would have helped with Baar Dau, but asking him is the issue since hes locked away in The Clockwork City.
We know that Almalexia and Vivec are ill-intentioned Sociopaths. But from everything we know Sotha Sil is still good, just a little introverted.
FoolishHuman wrote: »Our characters don't know that the tribunal stole the power from the heart or that they betrayed nerevar. We just have to believe that they are genuine deities and that the natural order is that the divine energy is with them.