![]() ![]() And what are those coins, anyway?įor anyone wondering about the coins: /FUzY460iJM- Lukas JanuTo see this content please enable targeting cookies. What could "Transcribe the past" be referring to? Well, transcribe means "to put into writing", there's a book emoji, and there's a book in the image, underneath some coins. Let's go back to the wording of the tweet, too: That bottom candle isn't just beneath the word Hammerfell and in the Hammerfell region - it's also placed exactly at the tip of the compass arrow pointing due east. One thing that does point to Akavir in the image, for instance, is the compass, down at the bottom. If we're looking for clues pointing to Akavir, we'd do better taking a step back to the tweet, and looking at the picture as a whole. But he doesn't fight off the Akavir - the two Akavir invasions took place a couple of hundred years either side of the period when Svargrim was around, and the book itself just suggests that if they had attacked, they'd have probably run off at the sight of him. Likewise, the mysterious coin dubbed "The Wolf of Solitude" does refer to High King Svargrim, and there is a book, found in the recent, Solitude-set Elder Scrolls Online: Greymoor expansion, called The Wolf of Solitude that talks about him fighting off enemies. The issue here though is, one, that the thing at the top is a book, rather than a block of wood symbolising a boat. Looking that up gets you a book which tells the story of the King of Solitude who fought off Akaviri invaders *from the sea* There's a candle right- □Nyght□ JanuTo see this content please enable targeting cookies. The coin next to it says 'The Wolf of Solitude'. ![]() The candle at the top is sitting on a box, which is over the ocean, like a boat. So mysterious that even the in-game books about it is called Mysterious Akavir, it's long been a source of infatuation for fans who want to see something completely new in a main series Elder Scrolls. ![]() If you take the time to read the in-game books (who doesn't?!) you'll know that the Akavir have invaded the continent of Tamriel a couple of times, via Skyrim, in the past. There's an interesting, if slightly flawed theory here about the next location being Akavir, the separate, mysterious continent to the east which plays home to snake-vampire-people and another humanoid race they're assumed to have eaten. Some fans have had fun with more far-out ideas. But are we just going to leave it there? Like hell! Notice what's obscured in the above tweet compared to here.īut is it that simple? Well, probably. Here's the original paper copy of the Skyrim map that came bundled with collectors editions and official guides. Compare it to the usual hand-drawn maps of Skyrim and notice how Hammerfell is conspicuous by its inclusion. Beyond that, the other surrounding provinces - High Rock to the west, Cyrodiil to the south-east, and Morrowind to the east - are all obscured. As YouTuber Camelworks points out, the map is actually cropped here - parts of Skyrim, such as Riften, are out of shot entirely. There's also more than just the candle pointing to it. One of the three candles is plonked right under the word "Hammerfell", after all, and the Redguard homeland has been seen as the mostly likely setting for some time - we wrote about it extensively (and maybe just a tiny bit over-enthusiastically) back in 2018 after the initial teaser, concluding that Hammerfell is by far the most likely location for The Elder Scrolls 6 going by the available options, and all the info we have so far. It certainly looks that way, on the surface. Finally Hammerfell confirmed - Spideri □️ JanuTo see this content please enable targeting cookies. ![]()
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