the-old-caius
I'm just an ordinary man.
54 posts
The old Caius. Relocated to @Caius-Antivirus
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the-old-caius · 8 months ago
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11月3日 いいおっさんの日
November 3rd Good Old Man's Day
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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relocated. @caius-antivirus
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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Gonna be moving the blog today, sorry for any annoyance
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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But is not that THE Point?
Sometimes I like to watch what other say about the writing in The Elder Scrolls, and sometimes I run across people who, disappointed in watered down and discarded lore, try to use it it rewrites
Skyrim’s Civil War with the Stormcloaks and Talos worship is one such example when plenty of people who complain about the loss of previous lore try to use it in rewrites, and by doing so, completely misses the point of that the current story is telling (if clumsily and contradictory at times). They want the Stormcloaks’ conflict with the Empire be about venerating the old Nordic gods and be a tale about the uwunderdogs vs imperialism.
Keep reading
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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he's got a sadness about him you only see in catholic stained glass windows
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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Was losing my ability to think when I tried writing this but what I was saying is that the past is haunting Skyrim in every way possible. Alduin is back and denying the world a future, untended graves are filled with the dead walking, the Nord have lost their own religion and are killing each other over a god imposed on them by the Empire... even the dragonborn is the last, killing deathless beings and stealing their memory, speaking to dead gods and seeking and beating Alduin in the afterlife with the help of the dead... the country is ravaged by war and in ruins... Winterhold is lost... the Nord are fearful of magic when it was once integral to them... death too. So much of Skyrim is about the death of people, cultures, gods and ideals. Twisting the memory of them to fuel the rampant obsession with death. Everything the Nord do not know is an enemy, but everything they know is lost or warped to make more enemies. A paranoid people
Sundered king-less bleeding
skyrim. game about time
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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Martin's weird non-reactions to the player committing murder and assault, how he says "people died" in the cult of Sanguine without elaborating and that he owned the rose "briefly" kinda just makes me think he murdered those people. Maybe manslaughtered 'em via unbound daedra if we're generous
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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I really like the “not being the main character” thing about Oblivion’s main plot but it could have been taken even further. Every time you come back from your errands to visit Martin there should be some kind of larger-than-life situation or conversation going on for which you have no context at all. That would be funny
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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skyrim. game about time
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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If Lorkhan had his heart torn out by/at the behest of Akatosh for betrayal and Pelinal is heartless and in his chest sits only the rage of a mindless dragon but then the stone where his heart should've been is said to be the symbol of a covenant Akatosh sealed with his own heart-blood and then when the stone is destroyed and the covenant is broken Akatosh manifests and that was the last thing that needed to happen to have the LAST dragonborn appear. What does that mean
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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oblivion art nightmare bam bam 
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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some of ya’ll be like
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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Lorkhan and ES humanity's association with genocide to me seems like the result of one particular author's agenda- Ysgramor's "palaces of idleness" speech and everything about Pelinal have the same source. That and a fandom utterly obsessed with the notion of race war
i'd go a step farther and say that the entire elder scrolls series (as well as the genre of which it is a part) is irrevocably premised on the notion of race war and that attributing that fact to one particular developer rather than acknowledging the involvement of everyone else who was also initially involved in conceptualizing tamriel as "the arena" in which different "races" are destined to do battle is a bit reductive in that it doesn't address the wider issue (that the mainstream fantasy genre is rife with racism and colonialist thought and that elder scrolls is one of many examples of fantasy media that parrot racist and colonialist tropes dating back to tolkien and his imitators)
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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Last post got me curious, which daedra did your HoK choose for the Blood of the Daedra quest?
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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I think Cyrodiil should use glagolitic script. Slavic alphabet invented by missionaries from Byzantine, what more do you need
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the-old-caius · 2 years ago
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I neglected to mention, I don't necessarily buy that the intended reading was simply Divine Right of Kings Good, Empire Good. It's not what I got out of it, at the very least. Martin has a crisis of faith specifically regarding the god that granted the right of Kings, says that waiting for a divine to intervene and guide you isn't how you fight off evil, (supposedly this is framed as correct, since that conviction is what leads us to victory at Bruma, subsequently being how we even get the amulet back) (the complicated part here is that while this, in part, denounces the idea of a god-chosen Emperor, he also fulfills that idea in the same act) and like, he ended the covenant, the third era and the septim dynasty, and that's what saved Tamriel, so. YMMV? In the end, a divine did intervene, but only because of the Amulet being shattered, so blindly clinging to that symbol of rule would've ended far worse... the invocation of the avatar is also weirdly ambiguous regarding why things actually happened. I've said this as a joke before, you could 100% read it as divine retribution instead. It's also not like Akatosh is a beacon of morality or sense.
The story lacks perspective- you get the Blades, a religious order dedicated to Talos and sworn to serve the Dragonborn on one side, and the insane world-ending cultists on the other. Not good! But Martin specifically, as arguably the central character of the Main Quest, has more going on than just being a symbol for a "righteous reign of emperors". Quite the opposite, at times
[the imperial legion specifically, the Empire's tool for conquest, also renders itself useless to actually fighting off the forces of Oblivion cause they're busy "defending" the border, so like... that might not count as an explicit condemnation of imperial conquest (Redguard did that), but it certainly doesn't cast it in a good light.]
M. Caius-antivirus 1) don’t know your pronouns 2) I keep thinking of your soldier/poet/king thingie and like. 🤔 can’t quite word it but do you think Martin found apotheosis as Just Martin or as Martin Septim? I know the intended reading is the second one because Todd Coward said divine right of kings, but the more I think about it, the more I find it romantic/rewarding that he was ultimately Just Martin. What do you think? :o
Good evening 1.) he/him :] and 2.) okay so here's the thing. I have so much to say about like. Everything that's behind the covenant and the amulet and how that kinda re-frames in my mind a little. Like the origins are pretty fucked up and I think making it fucked up was a conscious decision
Short answer is that I think the breaking of the amulet and covenant was another turning point where something significant changed. Avatar of Akatosh.
His blood... the dragon needs the mortality of human flesh for the blood to mean something? You know? All of it.
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