We dont know the full extent of Pyandonea. The Maormer can very well have access to vast resources, or at the same time the entire Race appears to be an Authoritarian people devoted to serving their king and working to fight the injustice their snide high elf cousins wronged them with. You'd be surprised what can be accomplished when an entire people commits to a singular purpose, often sacrificing basic everyday living the rest of Tamrielans take for granted. The Empire could learn a thing or two.
To the question of why we dont see them everywhere, because theyre Maormer, plain and simple. That people are just like the Altmer when it comes to their views on the "lesser races", however a bit more extreme. Combine that with their militaristic nature and youd sooner see them storming the beaches of Tamriels port cities than sending merchants with good intentions, their society probably doesn't even have a word for friend, or ally.
MLGProPlayer wrote: »We dont know the full extent of Pyandonea. The Maormer can very well have access to vast resources, or at the same time the entire Race appears to be an Authoritarian people devoted to serving their king and working to fight the injustice their snide high elf cousins wronged them with. You'd be surprised what can be accomplished when an entire people commits to a singular purpose, often sacrificing basic everyday living the rest of Tamrielans take for granted. The Empire could learn a thing or two.
To the question of why we dont see them everywhere, because theyre Maormer, plain and simple. That people are just like the Altmer when it comes to their views on the "lesser races", however a bit more extreme. Combine that with their militaristic nature and youd sooner see them storming the beaches of Tamriels port cities than sending merchants with good intentions, their society probably doesn't even have a word for friend, or ally.
We meet friendly Maormer NPCs though, including one in Summerset. Just because their society is authoritarian doesn't mean everyone agrees with the regime.
The Thalmor are the primary antagonists by the time Skyrim takes place (they're just as evil as the Maormer, if not more), yet there are still plenty of friendly Altmer around.
I just find it unrealistic that they can be so isolated. You would expect to see at least a few defectors, traders, scholars, adventurers, etc.
MLGProPlayer wrote: »We dont know the full extent of Pyandonea. The Maormer can very well have access to vast resources, or at the same time the entire Race appears to be an Authoritarian people devoted to serving their king and working to fight the injustice their snide high elf cousins wronged them with. You'd be surprised what can be accomplished when an entire people commits to a singular purpose, often sacrificing basic everyday living the rest of Tamrielans take for granted. The Empire could learn a thing or two.
To the question of why we dont see them everywhere, because theyre Maormer, plain and simple. That people are just like the Altmer when it comes to their views on the "lesser races", however a bit more extreme. Combine that with their militaristic nature and youd sooner see them storming the beaches of Tamriels port cities than sending merchants with good intentions, their society probably doesn't even have a word for friend, or ally.
We meet friendly Maormer NPCs though, including one in Summerset. Just because their society is authoritarian doesn't mean everyone agrees with the regime.
The Thalmor are the primary antagonists by the time Skyrim takes place (they're just as evil as the Maormer, if not more), yet there are still plenty of friendly Altmer around.
I just find it unrealistic that they can be so isolated. You would expect to see at least a few defectors, traders, scholars, adventurers, etc.
The one errant Adventurer maybe. But understand the Maormer as a people are isolated to an island far off the Tamrielan coast, with the ever vigilant and aggressive Altmer Armada between them and the rest of the world. And to the rest of Tamriel the Maormer are given a negative impression. Everyone who hears of them hears the worst, and rightly so, as the worst are the ones leading their people.
The one single lovestruck Maormer in Summerset is a rare exception. In this kind of world setting at best i could believe one or two wayward Maormer trying to make a life for themselves on the mainland while trying to obscure their identity. An innkeeper on the frontier isn't going to question why this paying customer of an Elf looks a bit "fishy". But said Elf isn't going to get caught near any town guards any time soon. Nor any local Altmer.