Restoring Vvardenfell

Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 8:04 pm

i thought about it. Daar Ban( maybe i swiched the double 'a', not sure) would have destroyed nirn if not for the semi-succsesful ingenium.

I never heard that. Was that stated in the novel?
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Lucy
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 6:40 am

Newp, unless Don't Forget This is extrapolating from The Loveletters and the book. Personally, I think the ingenium was an all or nothing game.
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Nick Tyler
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 10:16 am

/\ I don't have my copy of the book anymore, but didtincly remmber the ingeniums being called "partially successful" and the rest of my statment is guestomation.
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Elea Rossi
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 11:37 am

I don't think it would have destroyed Nirn though; that seems like a much more daunting prospect for the little moon.
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Fanny Rouyé
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 4:22 pm

You mean a giant thing of Vivec dookie
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Gill Mackin
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 5:20 am

Leave Vvardenfell alone. It's a much nicer place without cliff racers and the ass hole elves. The mining companies might actually turn it into a place worth visiting after the eruption.
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Jaylene Brower
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 5:33 pm

Ebony and glass galore! The nords could easily capitalize on this, seeing how no one is really living there (save for some undead argonians, but that's not a problem) and Skyrim is right next door.
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Jordyn Youngman
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 5:07 pm

I don't think it would have destroyed Nirn though; that seems like a much more daunting prospect for the little moon.

Perhaps not destroy Nirn, but make sun death look like a cakewalk, or at least that's how I interpreted it.
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Bryanna Vacchiano
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 9:45 am

Perhaps not destroy Nirn, but make sun death look like a cakewalk, or at least that's how I interpreted it.

I still doubt that it would; even if it originally had more momentum that it did when it crashed, wouldn't it have just dug a deeper shaft and destroyed Vivec City whilst making it uninhabitable? I'm pretty sure that was what Sheogorath was aiming at.
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Floor Punch
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 9:30 am

I still doubt that it would; even if it originally had more momentum that it did when it crashed, wouldn't it have just dug a deeper shaft and destroyed Vivec City whilst making it uninhabitable? I'm pretty sure that was what Sheogorath was aiming at.

Depends on whether or not the increased momentum jumped the cataclysm to a higher level on the stepladder of fantasy disaster.
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Alexandra Ryan
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 10:06 pm

I don't think it would have destroyed Nirn though; that seems like a much more daunting prospect for the little moon.

If the Loveletter is anything to go by, then the surface would have been almost completely uninhabitable for centuries to come. So while that's not total destruction, the "partial success" of the ingenium was quite an improvement.
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Glu Glu
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 11:38 am

Just finished "The Infernal City" and concluded one thing: I will never get over the fact that Vvardenfell, Morrowind, is destroyed.
For some part, Dark Elves deserved such a fate, but not all. And not the beautiful, unique nature of Morrowind. This province had some of the greatest histories, folklore and knowledge. Architecture, Dunmer tribes... just like Dwemer before them.

http://rampantgames.com/blog/uploaded_images/morrowind2-724901.jpg
http://home.earthlink.net/~tanstaafl/morrowind029.jpg
http://image03.webshots.com/3/1/93/79/92419379EBginN_fs.jpg

I wonder if anyone will share the similar thoughts as mine. :(
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Love iz not
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 5:09 pm

Your nationalism, if curiously misplaced, is touching.
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Kelly John
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 7:22 pm

Just finished "The Infernal City" and concluded one thing: I will never get over the fact that Vvardenfell, Morrowind, is destroyed.
For some part, Dark Elves deserved such a fate, but not all. And not the beautiful, unique nature of Morrowind. This province had some of the greatest histories, folklore and knowledge. Architecture, Dunmer tribes... just like Dwemer before them.

It's like when one first plays Star Wars KOTOR as they escape Taris.

But as I've stated on this thread previously, Morrowind http://elderscrolls.blogspot.com/2005/10/loveletter-from-fifth-era.html. Eventually at least.
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Anthony Santillan
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 7:20 am

when the winds die down enough Above

Yes, because constant sandstorm winds are definitely an improvement :rolleyes:

Culturally, the Dunmer come back, though doubtlessly changed. If the Loveletter is still valid (that is if the Ingenium did not avert the future from which the letter was sent), Morrowind still svcks pretty bad 900+ years after the fact.
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Cameron Garrod
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 11:48 am

Yes, because constant sandstorm winds are definitely an improvement :rolleyes:

More like back to normal for Vvardenfell.
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ShOrty
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 9:48 pm

Ald Sotha is right next to Vivec, which was a lush, fertile land of lakes, and is apparently inhospitable Ashlands in 5E. The wording also implies that it is nearly impossible to venture outside when the winds are going, which means that it is worse than the Ashlands, which were habitable enough to sustain sizable settlements.
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Stephani Silva
 
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Post » Sun Jan 23, 2011 6:06 pm

Ald Sotha is right next to Vivec, which was a lush, fertile land of lakes, and is apparently inhospitable Ashlands in 5E. The wording also implies that it is nearly impossible to venture outside when the winds are going, which means that it is worse than the Ashlands, which were habitable enough to sustain sizable settlements.

Inhospitable for those living underground maybe, but it does seem to say that there are those living above. How many is anyone's guess. I suppose it's possible they're referring to those living outside the island, but I doubt that's the case.

That aside, do we know if this future was altered or the result of the Dunmer's attempts to stop Landfall (In other words, how does the predestination paradox work here)? Time travel is confusing enough when it's not in the TES universe.
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(G-yen)
 
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