That’s plenty believable if you’re not a delusional loyalist and think your alliance is the harbinger of peace and good will. They’re all guilty of doing horrible things in the name of victory.
MLGProPlayer wrote: »That’s plenty believable if you’re not a delusional loyalist and think your alliance is the harbinger of peace and good will. They’re all guilty of doing horrible things in the name of victory.
Not really since you are the hero of your alliance. In AD, for examp,e you are a member of the Queen's guard and one of her closest confidants. It makes zero sense to kill AD in other zones.
This is an oversight of OT. Cadwell's Gold/Silver reconciles this by basically saying your adventures in the other factions aren't real and represent a "what if" illusion.
Actually, I never had any issues. But then, my main characters -are- from thenebonheart pact, and while there certainly are some really jerkish generals from DC and AD making trouble in pact lands, there kinda are no corresponding generals from the pact making the same kind of trouble in DC and AD lands... the only daedric-worshipping magistrate the pact has is an internal antagonist taken down by the hero as a matter of course.The storylines do not seems to be built for 1T...if you travel to other factions and do their quests, you will find out there is at least one daeric worshipping general in your original faction, and they invaded the land of other faction and try to do evil thing (control or exterminate whole race etc)
How do each of you use your inner-reasoning to justify what did they do?
Yes that’s true. Personally, I always hated the forced loyalist character we’re given during the alliance storyline to begin with, as it’s contradictory to the role we play in the world. All that alliance soldier crap should’ve been left in PVP. The way I see it, if a group of soldiers from my alliance is acting unusually cruel, I stop them. The Dominion soldiers eat the children of the Argonian in the Pact storyline. Unless you’re playing a Bosmer character, most would consider that incredibly cruel, as being eaten is often seen as one of the most humiliating ways you can die. Even the Bosmer allied with the Dominion are no longer allowed to eat “anything that talks,” per dialogue between two Bosmer in Grahtwood. As far as the OP’s example goes, I see no issue in opposing them.MLGProPlayer wrote: »That’s plenty believable if you’re not a delusional loyalist and think your alliance is the harbinger of peace and good will. They’re all guilty of doing horrible things in the name of victory.
Not really since you are the hero of your alliance. In AD, for example you are a member of the Queen's guard and one of her closest confidants. It makes zero sense to kill AD in other zones.
This is an oversight of OT. Cadwell's Gold/Silver reconciles this by basically saying your adventures in the other factions aren't real and represent a "what if" illusion.
The storylines do not seems to be built for 1T...if you travel to other factions and do their quests, you will find out there is at least one daeric worshipping general in your original faction, and they invaded the land of other faction and try to do evil thing (control or exterminate whole race etc)
How do each of you use your inner-reasoning to justify what did they do?
Korah_Eaglecry wrote: »Though it might just be that ZOS seems to struggle with addressing the elephant in the room when it comes to the EP. Slavery. 10 years of freedom will not erase the millenias of wrongs and pain the Dunmer have enacted upon the Argonians. Yet there is very little in the way of this sort of hostility that should exist between the two. And then theres the almost forgettable slavery of Khajiit and Bretons that are overlooked by the Nords (those responsible for pushing the Dunmer to free their Argonian slaves). A farm with khajiit slaves is the center of a storyline in Stonefalls and quickly is forgotten once you move on to the final Brother of Strife storyline just a short jog down the road. And you might entirely miss the Bretons being enslaved by Dunmer if you didnt run into a Breton girl trying to escape along the riverbed in Shadowfen. You have a choice of turning her in to her owner or helping her escape. Its not until you reach Stormhaven in the DC storyline that you start seeing the actual act of enslavement by Dunmer on Bretons.
Korah_Eaglecry wrote: »As far as Im aware the only faction that seems mild compared to the others is the EP. They dont really have a prevailing part in either the DC and AD storylines and seem to either have been the last faction to be flushed out or overlooked when building the DC, AD storylines.