If you play on PC, I'd suggest you try out the Accurate World Map add-on.
https://www.esoui.com/downloads/info3377-AccurateWorldMap.html
In reviewing the submitted questions, this issue of geography and politics seemed paramount in importance. It arose in several questions, in various ways. Let’s deal with this directly.
Maps are tools. Nothing more. Nothing less. Standing in the Ashlands, a wayfinding map is a tool of survival. Able to assist you in finding your way to safety. Similarly, a ship’s map may aid a sailor in finding a calm harbor far from home.
But political maps? Maps that claim to represent the truth of land claimed by force of blade and spell? These maps aren’t tools for the reader. They’re tools for the mapmakers.
They speak of great strength when perhaps none exists. They speak of boundaries and borders that may exist only in the minds of people burdened by over-heavy crowns. To offer a contemporary example, have you ever seen a map of “the front” in the war between the three alliances? Do you believe that map was accurate for more than a day? At most? And, as always, remember that every written thing you read is subjective.
Add a weather system to the Tamriel map.
In reviewing the submitted questions, this issue of geography and politics seemed paramount in importance. It arose in several questions, in various ways. Let’s deal with this directly.
Maps are tools. Nothing more. Nothing less. Standing in the Ashlands, a wayfinding map is a tool of survival. Able to assist you in finding your way to safety. Similarly, a ship’s map may aid a sailor in finding a calm harbor far from home.
But political maps? Maps that claim to represent the truth of land claimed by force of blade and spell? These maps aren’t tools for the reader. They’re tools for the mapmakers.
They speak of great strength when perhaps none exists. They speak of boundaries and borders that may exist only in the minds of people burdened by over-heavy crowns. To offer a contemporary example, have you ever seen a map of “the front” in the war between the three alliances? Do you believe that map was accurate for more than a day? At most? And, as always, remember that every written thing you read is subjective.
recent loremaster response pertaining to maps (this was written from an in-character perspective) https://www.elderscrollsonline.com/en-gb/news/post/63811Add a weather system to the Tamriel map.
I can't have been the only one to read this and laughed at the thought of a weather channel on the map
but i digress, the main function of the map is to navigate to wayshrines, enhancing that functionality should be priority... everything else you can do with custom add-ons and out-of-game art.
In reviewing the submitted questions, this issue of geography and politics seemed paramount in importance. It arose in several questions, in various ways. Let’s deal with this directly.
Maps are tools. Nothing more. Nothing less. Standing in the Ashlands, a wayfinding map is a tool of survival. Able to assist you in finding your way to safety. Similarly, a ship’s map may aid a sailor in finding a calm harbor far from home.
But political maps? Maps that claim to represent the truth of land claimed by force of blade and spell? These maps aren’t tools for the reader. They’re tools for the mapmakers.
They speak of great strength when perhaps none exists. They speak of boundaries and borders that may exist only in the minds of people burdened by over-heavy crowns. To offer a contemporary example, have you ever seen a map of “the front” in the war between the three alliances? Do you believe that map was accurate for more than a day? At most? And, as always, remember that every written thing you read is subjective.
recent loremaster response pertaining to maps (this was written from an in-character perspective) https://www.elderscrollsonline.com/en-gb/news/post/63811Add a weather system to the Tamriel map.
I can't have been the only one to read this and laughed at the thought of a weather channel on the map
but i digress, the main function of the map is to navigate to wayshrines, enhancing that functionality should be priority... everything else you can do with custom add-ons and out-of-game art.
Yes.Fix Eastmarch's position on the Tamriel map.
ESO's take on the Great Houses' territorial distribution has gone very poorly, especially this year, but a new map isn't going to fix the NPCs, dialogue, quests, books, cities and so on.Fix the territorial distribution of the great houses of Morrowind (the territories of the Redoran house, the territories of the Dres house, the territories of the Indoril house, the territories of the Telvanni house, the territories of the Hlaalu house, etc).
That depends if who ever decides what needs to be fixed knows the geography. Some details are obscure and already retconned between games.Fix the positions of other territories. Fix the positions of some islands and add missing islands on the Tamriel map.
On reflection, that could be nice. It already shows some water bodies although I dread the thought of them filling the gaps between zones with mountains, like so much concrete in an enigmatic tunnel system.Add the mountain ranges on the map of Tamriel.
Add large rivers, inland seas, etc.
I think I'd be pleased to see it done, but is it really worth the work? Unlike maps in real life or static media, we can see the weather system of any place in created zones within minutes or seconds by going to them.Adding a region system to the Tamriel map.
For example:
Skyrim has its regions and within each region are the zone maps.
Add a weather system to the Tamriel map.
For example:
In the territories of Skyrim it is shown on the map of Tamriel as a surface with snowy winds.
In Elsweyr they are shown on the map of Tamriel, in the northern area arid areas are shown and in the southern area greener areas.
If anything wouldn't the map for that kinda time period especially with monsters, to worry about, getting in the way of surveying the land,(think of all the lost ruins we find) and the current war taking place frequently changing the borders be much more likely to be inaccurate, not expecting a satellite map of Nirn,