Lorkhan in Skyrim?

Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 12:02 pm

i can't tell if this thread is a joke.

i want it to be one so i can say "ha ha i fell for it" and go on with my day.
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Ernesto Salinas
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 11:31 am

Halo has tons more lore than TES, Infiniteley more.

As does; LOTR, D&D, Starcraft, Warcraft, Star Wars, Fallout, Battletech, Warhammer and Warhammer 40k, just about any fictional universe.

As well as Mass Effect, and Half-Life,


While I get where you are coming from in this particular post, using franchises that have been around for 30 years to discredit the amount of content of others is beyond cheap.
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Greg Cavaliere
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 3:56 pm

If the OP is asking if Lorkhan will appear in the flesh or anything like that, then just look up at night and you'll see his corpse in the sky. Other than that, no, he won't be appearing like Azura or Akatosh. He's dead to the world. But he's a huge part of Oblivion. The plot of Oblivion would have never happened if not for Lorkhan.

It's even heavily implied that every main character is a Shezzarine. It's heavily implied that the entire goal of the series is to reinstate Lorkhan to Mundus.

Just because he isn't in-your-face like Dagon or Akatosh or Azura does not mean he isn't playing a direct role in the integrity of the entire story of the series. The lore goes deeper than just what you see on the surface.
Well...Shor/Shezarr/Lorkhan does often appear as avatars. The two most famous being King Wulfhart and Pelinal.
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tannis
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 12:14 pm

Well, if skyrim turned out to be a bunch of sunny beaches, yeah, that would be kinda a kick to the lores nuts.
Let's not forget the complete invention of Suthat-Rayes for Morrowind.

Lore Buffs "Were's my kitty men?"
The khajiit are born in different forms, depending on the moons. You should know that already if you read the books, along with the RL book, the Infernal City. Also, Redguard came up with the Suthays, which was really when lore in TES was taken with a more serious approach.

As for the topic in hand, it would be a grave injustice to not have Shor/Shezarr/Lorkhan around, or have followers in every major city. He's big daddy to the nords, Mr. Number 1, etc. Hell, the nords are pretty much Shor/Shezarr/Lorkhan's soldiers against the forces of the stark raving mad time god, Akatosh/Alduin/Auriel.
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George PUluse
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 12:25 pm


What no what is happening in this thread

THE CREATION OF THE UNIVERSE IS EXPLAINED IN GREAT DETAIL. The creation myths stem from the memories of every mortal on Tamriel from the time that they were created. Yes, each has their own bias but they're all essentially the same exact story.


Of course not. Myths have similarities, but they dont tell the same story. And you base it in the "memories"? But thats also a religious interpretation. We have these things in the real world: explanations of common concepts in world religions, whether they are alien to each other, or related (in our case, Middle-eastern religions). This is called religious anthropology. The whole idea of common ancestry for the races, while Im not saying its wrong, could as well be a way of making Imperial citizens, no mater there race, believe in a common ancestry with each other.

Even the Eight Divines cult is an invention, and myth in TES works exactly like in real life (of course, I have the bias of an unbeliever): gods are determined by worshippers, not the other way around. So these beings, forces or gods exist, but they dont exist like you and I do.
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Megan Stabler
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 8:07 pm

I do agree that TES has an impressive amount of lore in it for a video game series, but when people start going nuts and nerding out on the lore of it as though it were on the same level as Star Wars and LOTR I just have to roll my eyes. Don't get me wrong, I'm glad that so many of you love the lore for TES, and I do as well, but I guess I'm probably just set in my ways of thinking that nothing will ever be greater than LOTR, and Star Wars in that regard.
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Rachel Cafferty
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 1:58 pm

Funny I was just thinking about this tonight. I re-read that 4 songs of ysmir book in Oblivion (ysmir shouting at people in the book made more sense to me now the first time I read it I thought it was a figure of speech :dry: ) according to that book lorkhan has already defeated alduin before, granted you gotta take what is said in any books with a grain of salt but I suspect lorkhan is going to be a much bigger problem than any dragon.
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Amie Mccubbing
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 2:19 pm

The only scenario in which Lorkhan would show up is if his creation (the mortal realm) ceised to be what he wanted it to be from the start, i.e. a part of the universe that is both constantly changing and never loses it's identity over time (i.e. it has an element of permanency). He'd then, just like Sheogorath, take steps to return things to the status quo.
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+++CAZZY
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 4:26 pm

While you are trying to be sarcastic, it's not that far from the truth. Lore was pretty much absent in Arena, it was 'Kill the evil wizard!' generic fantasy that was never really big.

Daggerfall, first actual noticing of the series. 90 books, all big print. Only a few offer intresting tidbits of lore. But the warp of the west... yeah, that was a horrible lame patchwork job which shows the complete disregard for a working lore. Seriously, that makes no sense and is really just a big "Lol JK!"

Morrowind, a highly succesful game. More tidbits of lore.

Ahh, Oblivion. I'm sure all of the lore buffs were so ready to explore Cyrodills lush jungles in HD... wait, what? No jungles whatsoever, even though thats what the lore said it was? Hmm, lore must matter a lot to bethesda.
And shivering isles. The biggest lore buff in the world had no idea what we might find because the lore has no information on the daedric realms beyond 2 vague description sentences.


So the Lore that Bethesda build for The Elder Scrolls, they shouldn't be allowed to change at all because of one angry fan raging online? Lore in fiction changes happen all the time, nothing is set - Even LOTR's and Star Wars have major lore changes. Change happens to be a big part of the Elder Scrolls, the Aedra are changed by the actions of mortals. The Psijic Order revere Change as one the greatest force. Change has been underlying theme of every TES game so far.
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Ria dell
 
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Post » Thu Sep 02, 2010 12:00 am

I think Danger Dan is reffering to an ACTIVE role in Skyrim. For example, the meteor that killed the dinosaurs 65 million years ago plays a vitally important role in the story of how I went to the shops today, as if it didn't happen, I would not exist and there would be dinosaurs (maybe) roaming around still with all sorts of bizzare things going on that we'll never experience. But it sure as hell doesn't take an active role in the story.
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~Amy~
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 3:39 pm

Of course not. Myths have similarities, but they dont tell the same story. And you base it in the "memories"? But thats also a religious interpretation. We have these things in the real world: explanations of common concepts in world religions, whether they are alien to each other, or related (in our case, Middle-eastern religions). This is called religious anthropology. The whole idea of common ancestry for the races, while Im not saying its wrong, could as well be a way of making Imperial citizens, no mater there race, believe in a common ancestry with each other.

Even the Eight Divines cult is an invention, and myth in TES works exactly like in real life (of course, I have the bias of an unbeliever): gods are determined by worshippers, not the other way around. So these beings, forces or gods exist, but they dont exist like you and I do.

But the thing is, the gods of TES exist. With the Nine, you can wear their relics of the Crusader and get their blessings. With the Daedric Princes, you can see them and talk to them and be killed by them. These "memories" are not religious interpretation. For example, every mortal remembers Lorkhan. EVERY MORTAL. Without being told. He is in every creation myth. And yet we can't interact with him or see him. He's dead to the world. But everyone remembers.

The devs wouldn't write these things if they were wrong. In TES, we have metaphysics much more figured out than in the real world, it just comes down to which bias you want to side with. Is Lorkhan the hero of man, or the villain of mer?

Myths are not the same in the real world as TES. Myths are what makes Alduin appear to the Imperials as Akatosh. The gods were not invented by mortals. I'm an unbeliever in real life too, but that's not how it works in TES.

The only scenario in which Lorkhan would show up is if his creation (the mortal realm) ceised to be what he wanted it to be from the start, i.e. a part of the universe that is both constantly changing and never loses it's identity over time (i.e. it has an element of permanency). He'd then, just like Sheogorath, take steps to return things to the status quo.

So...the main plot of Skyrim. Alduin eating the world.
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sarah simon-rogaume
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 11:42 am

But the thing is, the gods of TES exist. With the Nine, you can wear their relics of the Crusader and get their blessings. With the Daedric Princes, you can see them and talk to them and be killed by them. These "memories" are not religious interpretation. For example, every mortal remembers Lorkhan. EVERY MORTAL. Without being told. He is in every creation myth. And yet we can't interact with him or see him. He's dead to the world. But everyone remembers.

Really? I thought when you said "remembered" you meant they were told by their ancestors and so the "memory" lived on like that, but everyone knows who he is at birth? Everyone knows everything about the gods (though slightly differently to others depending on where they're born or who they're born to(?)) from the moment they come into the world?
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Kevin Jay
 
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Post » Thu Sep 02, 2010 12:07 am

No one can deny that there is a problem with the Lore of the Nirn. Too much metaphysics, not enough reality. It's still cool though, even if we're constantly bombarded with lies and double-speak.

And here I thought we were talking about a fantasy series. Reality would therefore be an invasive bad thing.

As for Lorkhan, since he is in part Alduin/Akatosh then by default he will be there. As his own individual consciousness? No clue, but it would be cool.

On the plus side, Todd said they wanted to go back towards the alien-ness of Morrowind. Oblivion wasn't fantasy enough for me sometimes (but not all the time, damn I love debating just what that ending was).

And yes, TES gods empirically exist in the fiction. Time is literally a dragon.
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hannah sillery
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 11:13 pm

Really? I thought when you said "remembered" you meant they were told by their ancestors and so the "memory" lived on like that, but everyone knows who he is at birth? Everyone knows everything about the gods (though slightly differently to others depending on where they're born or who they're born to(?)) from the moment they come into the world?

Not every god. Just Lorkhan.
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Danger Mouse
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 8:59 pm

Not every god. Just Lorkhan.

Oh. I thought you said that the creation myth was undeniably entirely accurate because they remember it... Why Lorkhan then? Why do they remember him?
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Kara Payne
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 9:04 pm

Oh. I thought you said that the creation myth was undeniably entirely accurate because they remember it... Why Lorkhan then? Why do they remember him?

Lorkhan is the creator. His nature is Mundus. No Lorkhan, no Mundus. They just...remember. Magic!
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Richard
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 6:46 pm

Lorkhan is the creator. His nature is Mundus. No Lorkhan, no Mundus. They just...remember. Magic!

The correct answer is "The Aldmer remember because, they claim, their ancestors were gods along with them. The humans remember because, they claim, their anscestors were servants to the gods." However the fact is that they do remember, at the core, Lorkhan got the soon-to-be-Aedra together and they all put a part of themselves into Mundus, then Lorkhan was "killed," then the world became as you see it.
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Tiffany Carter
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 5:44 pm

i can't tell if this thread is a joke.
(...)

Not the thead ! - Only some posters are. :blush:
If you ignore the "lore-ignorers" it can be quite entertaining and very interesting, too (if you're interested in TES-lore, like myself). :wink:
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Alessandra Botham
 
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Post » Wed Sep 01, 2010 1:18 pm

Considering Lorkhan is Shor to the Nords, and is the enemy to other gods I believe he will have an appearance in Skyrim. Also given that he is seen as a Warrior King in the Nordic mythology I would bank a large amount of septims on the Dovakhiin being a rebirth of him as was stated earlier in this thread by someone.

This is all my opinion of course. So don't flame please.
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Ludivine Dupuy
 
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