Skyrim is so Lord of the Rings

Post » Mon Sep 05, 2011 8:32 am

Anyway, I don't see what's so Tolkieny about Skyrim.

You can't just say 'it's like LOTR' and not explain why.

As far as modern videogame western fantasy RPGs go , I would argue that the Elder Scrolls series probably owes the least to Tolkien. Although some elements are borrowed, I would argue that Elder Scrolls as a series has the most original lore and aesthetic out of nearly every moden day western videogame rpg.

For example, whils there are 'dwarves' and 'elves' in the Elder Scrolls, in nearly all other western fantasy RPGs the dwarves are actually dwarves, whilst in the Elder Scrolls they are elves.

I think that the Elder Scrolls as a series owes more to Roman, Greek and Nordic mythology as well as their own writers than to LOTR.


C'mon now, that screenshot of Whiterun with the woman looking at it from a distance could easily be mistaken for a shot of Eowin Looking at the City of Edoras in LOTR.

Tolkien Also invented Dark Elves and Orcs and the idea that both were Elves that fell from grace.

TES to me is a mish-mash of Tolkien and a handful of real-world ancient cultures (Roman, Mongolian, Persian etc.) albeit mixed creatively, but mostly borrowed.

I don't think it's a bad thing though, nothing is truly original, nor can it be, everything that people create is a product of things they've been exposed to.
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Dalton Greynolds
 
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Post » Sun Sep 04, 2011 9:22 pm

Modern day fantasy was inspired by Tolkien so yes, yes it is.


^ This.

If Tolkein had never written his epics, there would be no modern Fantasy genre for anything. No D&D, no Table-top RPG's, No Fantasy movies, definitely no RPG games. Before Tolkein, there was nothing.
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Jessica Stokes
 
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Post » Mon Sep 05, 2011 6:52 am

^ This.

If Tolkein had never written his epics, there would be no modern Fantasy genre for anything. No D&D, no Table-top RPG's, No Fantasy movies, definitely no RPG games. Before Tolkein, there was nothing.


Completely untrue. There were several fantasy movies before Tolkien released his books, Indeed Snow White came out before Lord of the Rings.

Aside from that there were several famous fantasy authors before Tolkien who wrote in the same genre. For example. HP Lovecraft and Robert E Howard.
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Veronica Flores
 
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Post » Mon Sep 05, 2011 12:07 am

Completely untrue. There were several fantasy movies before Tolkien released his books, Indeed Snow White came out before Lord of the Rings.

Aside from that there were several famous fantasy authors before Tolkien who wrote in the same genre. For example. HP Lovecraft and Robert E Howard.


Don't get me wrong, I have a deep seated Hero-worship complex with both Poe and Lovecraft. My point is that Tolkien perfected it. Every modern day fantasy story has more in common with Tolkien than any other fantasy author. Yes, the Call of Cthulu series of products is based off of Lovecraft, and Lovecraft's Necronomicon/Alhazred stories are nigh perfect. But most fantasy epics are based off of Tolkien.

Those Poe and Lovecraft (as well as Howard) definitely came before Tolkien, and they are my two favorite authors, but Tolkien created the standard of the day for modern fantasy.
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Darren
 
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Post » Mon Sep 05, 2011 12:12 pm

Don't get me wrong, I have a deep seated Hero-worship complex with both Poe and Lovecraft. My point is that Tolkien perfected it. Every modern day fantasy story has more in common with Tolkien than any other fantasy author. Yes, the Call of Cthulu series of products is based off of Lovecraft, and Lovecraft's Necronomicon/Alhazred stories are nigh perfect. But most fantasy epics are based off of Tolkien.

Those Poe and Lovecraft (as well as Howard) definitely came before Tolkien, and they are my two favorite authors, but Tolkien created the standard of the day for modern fantasy.


I suppose I would agree with you in so far as he created the mythology on which much moden fantasy is based.

However, whilst I think Tokien was really impressive in the sense that he created that universe and setting, I think that many fantasy writers have written with more depth in regards to characters and ethics and philosophy than him, both before him and after him.
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Steven Nicholson
 
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Post » Mon Sep 05, 2011 6:16 am

C'mon now, that screenshot of Whiterun with the woman looking at it from a distance could easily be mistaken for a shot of Eowin Looking at the City of Edoras in LOTR.

Tolkien Also invented Dark Elves and Orcs and the idea that both were Elves that fell from grace.

TES to me is a mish-mash of Tolkien and a handful of real-world ancient cultures (Roman, Mongolian, Persian etc.) albeit mixed creatively, but mostly borrowed.

I don't think it's a bad thing though, nothing is truly original, nor can it be, everything that people create is a product of things they've been exposed to.


I know this is nitpicking, but whilst Tolkien invented orcs in the modern sense, he didn't invent dark elves. Dark elves were taken directly from norse mythology and in fact were staples of 19th Romantic fantasy.
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Samantha hulme
 
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Post » Mon Sep 05, 2011 11:52 am

I suppose I would agree with you in so far as he created the mythology on which much moden fantasy is based.

However, whilst I think Tokien was really impressive in the sense that he created that universe and setting, I think that many fantasy writers have written with more depth in regards to characters and ethics and philosophy than him, both before him and after him.

That is true, but the Lord of The Rings is the story of the Hobbits, mainly Frodo and Sam, but in order to show the events in the other locations during the War of The Ring, he used the perspective of Merry and Pippin. This would explain the lack of character development for other characters. It also explains why the ethics and philosophy are not explained in depth, because the story is written through the perspective of the four hobbits, who have lived secluded in the Shire and don't know much about the outside world. The meaning of the story is meant to be interpreted by the reader, not described by the author.
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Kellymarie Heppell
 
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Post » Sun Sep 04, 2011 11:55 pm

Wrong.

:facepalm:



Wrong ... Orcs existed far before Tolkien. They were already mentioned in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beowulf.



The source from which Tolkien took the word 'orc' in Beowulf is what is known as a hapax legemenon, that is a word that only exists once in a written language or text. The word appears as orcnéas (nominative singular form, *orcné) which is a compound of 'orc' and 'né', a word meaning corpse.

Even though Beowulf is written in a Germanic language, Anglo-Saxon English (Old English), many etymologists consider the word in Beowulf, orcnéas, to be compound form consisting of orcus, a Latin derived word meaning demon or cthonic(underground) being, which would have been a familiar term to a scribe with a Christian education living in England at the time of the composition of the poem, and , resulting in orcné, or demon corpse.

That spot of info in Beowulf is the total of all pre-Tolkien lore concerning the term orc. In other words virtually nothing.

What needs to be understood, however, is that in Germanic (Norse, Anglo-Saxon, continental Germanic) lore, there is a vast quiver of terms that exist to describe a number of malicious, sub-human beings: Troll, Thurs (giant), Alf (elf), Dvergr (dwarf), and germane to this topic, Orc, at least in its singular instance in Beowulf, were often used interchangeably.

For example, in an Old Icelandic saga, our hero could have disturbed a draugr who lived under a waterfall and in the succeeding paragraphs, the author might call the inhuman beast a draugr, a troll, and a thurs (giant).

In the world view of the ancient Germanic peoples, Troll and Thurs were super-classes which contained a bestiary of creatures.

What Tolkien did was take these old terms and create discrete species out of them with discrete characteristics and behaviors.
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k a t e
 
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Post » Mon Sep 05, 2011 2:02 am

The source from which Tolkien took the word 'orc' in Beowulf is what is known as a hapax legemenon, that is a word that only exists once in a written language or text. The word appears as orcnéas (nominative singular form, *orcné) which is a compound of 'orc' and 'né', a word meaning corpse.

Even though Beowulf is written in a Germanic language, Anglo-Saxon English (Old English), many etymologists consider the word in Beowulf, orcnéas, to be compound form consisting of orcus, a Latin derived word meaning demon or cthonic(underground) being, which would have been a familiar term to a scribe with a Christian education living in England at the time of the composition of the poem, and , resulting in orcné, or demon corpse.

That spot of info in Beowulf is the total of all pre-Tolkien lore concerning the term orc. In other words virtually nothing.

What needs to be understood, however, is that in Germanic (Norse, Anglo-Saxon, continental Germanic) lore, there is a vast quiver of terms that exist to describe a number of malicious, sub-human beings: Troll, Thurs (giant), Alf (elf), Dvergr (dwarf), and germane to this topic, Orc, at least in its singular instance in Beowulf, were often used interchangeably.

For example, in an Old Icelandic saga, our hero could have disturbed a draugr who lived under a waterfall and in the succeeding paragraphs, the author might call the inhuman beast a draugr, a troll, and a thurs (giant).

In the world view of the ancient Germanic peoples, Troll and Thurs were super-classes which contained a bestiary of creatures.

What Tolkien did was take these old terms and create discrete species out of them with discrete characteristics and behaviors.


Ok, thanks for sharing these informations. It seems that my memory - my knowledge maybe - about that stuff is ... failing me.

@Venule : sorry, it seems you were right. My bad.

:foodndrink:
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LuBiE LoU
 
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Post » Mon Sep 05, 2011 3:42 am

What isn't these days?
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Kate Norris
 
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Post » Mon Sep 05, 2011 6:39 am

Apart from naming that has evolved a bit since LOTR which was more or a literal discription of the place in the name "Mount Doom" a mountine of doom :biggrin: preaty much all things to do with fantasy can have somthing that seems like it was from LOTR after all it was LOTR that started the genre.


As much as I love Tolkien's work, I have to correct you on this. Tolkien did not start the genre. Even he built on what came before. There have been tales of elves, walking trees, goblins, giant spiders, Orcs, wizards, etc for thousands of years. He is undoubtedly the most widespread, famous author of fantasy fiction, but certainly not the first. Did he effectively revolutionise the genre? Yes! He is by far the best fantasy author to have ever lived in my opinion, but don't put him on a pedestal. He did not invent fantasy.

On topic, I can see elements of Tolkien's work in Skyrim. Considering his effect on the fantasy genre it's not surprising. I do think Bethesda have done a great job putting their own twist on things though. Can't wait to play a ne TES game.
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A Boy called Marilyn
 
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Post » Sun Sep 04, 2011 10:34 pm

Oh, well of course. There's absolutely no denying Tolkien's influence on the genre. The man was a genius, and his works are masterpieces that made fantasy what it is today.

All I'm saying is that just because TES has elfs and orcs and dwarfs and mithril doesn't mean it's a Tolkien rip-off. Hell, he shaped the genre so much that it would be almost impossible to avoid making a fantasy game without owing a debt to him. But what's great about TES is how wonderfully it subverts the cliches of the genre; taking well-worn concepts and making them something exciting and original.

TES doesn't have any dwarfs in that sense.
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candice keenan
 
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Post » Mon Sep 05, 2011 7:33 am

I prefer to think of it as sharing more similarities with Game of Thrones. Epic series.


Game of Thrones! God I love that so much more than Lord of the Rings, just saying. With the upheaval of politics in Skyrim after the King dying it really does match up a bit.
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Roberta Obrien
 
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