The Elder Scrolls: Arena: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Our Elves Are Different]] -- Really, there isn't much difference between humans and elves at all.
* [[Our Elves Are Different]] -- Really, there isn't much difference between humans and elves at all.
* [[Our Goblins Are Different]] -- Our Goblins are [[Goddamn Bats]].
* [[Our Goblins Are Different]] -- Our Goblins are [[Goddamn Bats]].
* [[Our Orcs Are Different]] -- Our Orcs are dressed like players of American football. Notably, they're a generic enemy and not a playable race as they are in the post-''[[The Elder Scrolls II Daggerfall|Daggerfall]]'' games.
* [[Our Orcs Are Different]] -- Our Orcs are dressed like players of American football. Notably, they're a generic enemy and not a playable race as they are in the post-''[[The Elder Scrolls II: Daggerfall|Daggerfall]]'' games.
* [[Plot Coupon]] -- The pieces of the Staff of Chaos.
* [[Plot Coupon]] -- The pieces of the Staff of Chaos.
* [[Randomly Generated Levels]] -- And how!
* [[Randomly Generated Levels]] -- And how!
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* [[Treacherous Advisor]] -- Jagar Tharn.
* [[Treacherous Advisor]] -- Jagar Tharn.
* [[What Happened to the Mouse?]] -- Or rather, what happened to the Staff of God-Damned Chaos? ''Arena'' sets it up to be the [[Cosmic Keystone]] of Tamriel... and the sequels never mention it again.
* [[What Happened to the Mouse?]] -- Or rather, what happened to the Staff of God-Damned Chaos? ''Arena'' sets it up to be the [[Cosmic Keystone]] of Tamriel... and the sequels never mention it again.
** Same with General Warhaft, the Emperor's chief military adviser. Between [[The Elder Scrolls Arena|TES1]] and [[The Elder Scrolls IV Oblivion|TES4]] the only mention made of him is that he's written two really boring and useless books.
** Same with General Warhaft, the Emperor's chief military adviser. Between [[The Elder Scrolls: Arena|TES1]] and [[The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion|TES4]] the only mention made of him is that he's written two really boring and useless books.
** Apparently, the Staff of Chaos was kept hidden [http://www.uesp.net/wiki/Lore:Staff_of_Chaos somewhere in White Gold Tower] (that huge tower in the middle of Imperial City in Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion).
** Apparently, the Staff of Chaos was kept hidden [http://www.uesp.net/wiki/Lore:Staff_of_Chaos somewhere in White Gold Tower] (that huge tower in the middle of Imperial City in Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion).
* [[Wide Open Sandbox]] -- A wide, wide, ''wide'' open sandbox.
* [[Wide Open Sandbox]] -- A wide, wide, ''wide'' open sandbox.

Revision as of 15:54, 7 June 2014

"The best techniques are passed down by the survivors."
Gaiden Shinji

The first video game in The Elder Scrolls series, released for DOS in 1994. Originally, it was going to be an Action Game with RPG Elements, about gladiatorial combat. However, as development went on, the RPG elements grew more and more, until the arenas themselves were cut out altogether (they are still mentioned in some Dummied Out narration, though.)

The player takes on the role of a member of the Imperial Court of Tamriel. In the opening Cutscene The Emperor is trapped in another dimension by his most trusted courtier, the battlemage Jagar Tharn. The evil Tharn then uses magic to disguise himself as the emperor and take his place.

However, he is noticed by both the player character and the lesser sorceress Ria Silmane. Silmane threatens to reveal Tharn's new identity, so Tharn kills her and throws the player into the Imperial dungeons.

However, Silmane appears to the player in his/her dreams, and guides him/her to reassemble the Staff of Chaos, a weapon capable of defeating Tharn and rescuing the emperor, but which Tharn has broken into eight pieces and scattered across the Empire.

That's right, there are no arenas in this game. At all. However, as if to make up for that, this game is huge. There really is an entire life-sized continent (4000x3000 square miles - three times larger than Europe!) to wander around in, with hundreds of settlements and thousands of NPCs.

The game has been released as a freeware download by Bethesda as part of their commemoration of the fifteenth anniversary of the inception of The Elder Scrolls. Get it here.

Tropes used in The Elder Scrolls: Arena include: