Honestly i love how badass vicn mods make the dragonborn seems (rightly so) he practically just killed and absorbed a version of himself who hunted down every dragon and dominated all who stood in his way
This "Dov-ah-kiin" is not our future self. Back in Atmora, there was a woman who was sacrificed to try and stop the eternal winter and/or Mora's influence covering Atmora, and she had a guardian. Unslaad is the dream of the Grey Owl, who dreams of Atmora. In this dream, the Grey Owl has recreated the sacrifice & her guardian as Austella & "Dov-ah-kiin", which you can see at Dragon's Peak. Why is it a "Dov-ah-kiin"? Well, to the Grey Owl the Dovahkiin is just the ultimate power fantasy, a unstoppable killing machine, hence the Dov-Ah-Kiin. It represents everything he wants to attain from us, & what he thinks we truly are. The the Trilogy story hammers in that we can be a catalyst for rebirth as well as destruction, that we be more than a power fantasy. That is the difference between us and the Grey Owl/Dov-ah-kiin. In short, the Dov-ah-kiin is a combination of the Grey Owl's concept of what you are as well as an echo of the guardian for the sacrifice to try and keep Atmora out of the ice and/or Mora's grasp.
@@ravindunandirathna1600 Miraak is still the first dragonborn. Its not the case that the sacrifice's guardian in Atmora was a dragonborn, we don't really know anything about them. Its just that when the Grey Owl recreates the guardian in his dream, he changes the figure to include his perception of us, what a dragonborn is or should be.
This is our "Dark Future", where we rebuilt the Blades, built an army, and hunted every dragon in existance, even betrayed Paarthurnax. Our title has two meanings: Dovahkiin - Dragonborn, and Dov Ah Kiin - Fated Dragon Slayer. He is the "simulated" version of us, who stayed true to the dragon nature, and valued power over everything else, and crushed everything and everyone who stood in his way. But it doesn't have to be like this. You don't have to kill Paarthurnax. You don't have to rebuild the Blades. You don't have to kill Uliss. YOU CAN doesn't have to mean YOU MUST. You are the Prisoner. You can say "MAYBE", when entire universe screams at you YOU MUST! If you truly are slave of fate, your journey cannot end in any other way than with Uliss' death. But by sparing her and coming so far, you proved you can be better than this. "The cycle of violence end here. We must be better than this!" - Kratos
@@grzegorzflorek5623and whats the difference between "NO" and "MAYBE"? Do you renounce your fate as a whole in "NO", while in "MAYBE" You still take it but you have more free will to chose what happens?
@@jamonyqueso6328 If a machine is programed to say: "I am not a machine!" over and over again, does it make it human? Or at least, not a machine? No, of course it doesn't. Whether it would say that is is, or it isn't a machine, wouldn't change a damn thing about it. When you enter Markarth for the first time, Margaret gets murdered. You can save her by killing her would be killer, but you'll be force-greeted by Eltrys into "Forsworn Conspiracy" quest. Whether to the question "will you save her?" your answer will be yes or no, it doesn't change the outcome in the grand scheme of things, the quest's result will be the same - guards killing Eltrys, and trying to arrest you. You can kill the guards, but then you'll get huge bounty in Markarth, with no option of surrendering and paying up - you go to Cidhna regardless, or live as a fugitive, KOS in Markarth. You can go to prison, escape with Madanach, or kill him. Either action helps murderous scumbags on one or another side of the conflict. Except when you'll say "maybe" to Eltrys' request, and decide not to involve yourself. Or, you don't have to do the House of Horrors quest, and serve Molag Bal. You are ordered to bring Lothrolf to the Altar, and unless you agree, you are trapped. But once You're out of the cage, he has no control over you. You can ignore the quest, or find and kill Lothrolf instead of delivering him, saying one big FU to Molag. YOU. DON'T. HAVE. TO. DO. ANYTHING! That's the power of "maybe". Yes or No are chains that bind you to the consequences of your choice. Only "maybe" offers you freedom.
This "Dov-ah-kiin" is not our future self. Back in Atmora, there was a woman who was sacrificed to try and stop the eternal winter and/or Mora's influence covering Atmora, and she had a guardian. Unslaad is the dream of the Grey Owl, who dreams of Atmora. In this dream, the Grey Owl has recreated the sacrifice & her guardian as Austella & "Dov-ah-kiin", which you can see at Dragon's Peak. Why is it a "Dov-ah-kiin"? Well, to the Grey Owl the Dovahkiin is just the ultimate power fantasy, a unstoppable killing machine, hence the Dov-Ah-Kiin. It represents everything he wants to attain from us, & what he thinks we truly are. The the Trilogy story hammers in that we can be a catalyst for rebirth as well as destruction, that we can be more than a power fantasy. That is the difference between us and the Grey Owl/Dov-ah-kiin. In short, the Dov-ah-kiin is a combination of the Grey Owl's concept of what you are as well as an echo of the guardian for the sacrifice to try and keep Atmora out of the ice and/or Mora's grasp.
Yep, looks like I accidentally left in on here. I played each fight in the trilogy a couple times to select the most "cinematic", or best looking one to upload. Must've forgotten to turn off god mode in the middle of retrying the boss again for this attempt.
Honestly i love how badass vicn mods make the dragonborn seems (rightly so) he practically just killed and absorbed a version of himself who hunted down every dragon and dominated all who stood in his way
This "Dov-ah-kiin" is not our future self. Back in Atmora, there was a woman who was sacrificed to try and stop the eternal winter and/or Mora's influence covering Atmora, and she had a guardian. Unslaad is the dream of the Grey Owl, who dreams of Atmora. In this dream, the Grey Owl has recreated the sacrifice & her guardian as Austella & "Dov-ah-kiin", which you can see at Dragon's Peak.
Why is it a "Dov-ah-kiin"? Well, to the Grey Owl the Dovahkiin is just the ultimate power fantasy, a unstoppable killing machine, hence the Dov-Ah-Kiin. It represents everything he wants to attain from us, & what he thinks we truly are. The the Trilogy story hammers in that we can be a catalyst for rebirth as well as destruction, that we be more than a power fantasy. That is the difference between us and the Grey Owl/Dov-ah-kiin.
In short, the Dov-ah-kiin is a combination of the Grey Owl's concept of what you are as well as an echo of the guardian for the sacrifice to try and keep Atmora out of the ice and/or Mora's grasp.
Interesting, so in Vicn's lore Miraak isn't the first Dragonborn?
@@ravindunandirathna1600 Miraak is still the first dragonborn. Its not the case that the sacrifice's guardian in Atmora was a dragonborn, we don't really know anything about them.
Its just that when the Grey Owl recreates the guardian in his dream, he changes the figure to include his perception of us, what a dragonborn is or should be.
Did Vicn explain why we can beat future Dovahkiin? It's our future and much more badass self after all.
This is our "Dark Future", where we rebuilt the Blades, built an army, and hunted every dragon in existance, even betrayed Paarthurnax. Our title has two meanings: Dovahkiin - Dragonborn, and Dov Ah Kiin - Fated Dragon Slayer. He is the "simulated" version of us, who stayed true to the dragon nature, and valued power over everything else, and crushed everything and everyone who stood in his way. But it doesn't have to be like this. You don't have to kill Paarthurnax. You don't have to rebuild the Blades. You don't have to kill Uliss. YOU CAN doesn't have to mean YOU MUST. You are the Prisoner. You can say "MAYBE", when entire universe screams at you YOU MUST! If you truly are slave of fate, your journey cannot end in any other way than with Uliss' death. But by sparing her and coming so far, you proved you can be better than this. "The cycle of violence end here. We must be better than this!" - Kratos
@@grzegorzflorek5623and whats the difference between "NO" and "MAYBE"? Do you renounce your fate as a whole in "NO", while in "MAYBE" You still take it but you have more free will to chose what happens?
@@jamonyqueso6328 If a machine is programed to say: "I am not a machine!" over and over again, does it make it human? Or at least, not a machine? No, of course it doesn't. Whether it would say that is is, or it isn't a machine, wouldn't change a damn thing about it. When you enter Markarth for the first time, Margaret gets murdered. You can save her by killing her would be killer, but you'll be force-greeted by Eltrys into "Forsworn Conspiracy" quest. Whether to the question "will you save her?" your answer will be yes or no, it doesn't change the outcome in the grand scheme of things, the quest's result will be the same - guards killing Eltrys, and trying to arrest you. You can kill the guards, but then you'll get huge bounty in Markarth, with no option of surrendering and paying up - you go to Cidhna regardless, or live as a fugitive, KOS in Markarth. You can go to prison, escape with Madanach, or kill him. Either action helps murderous scumbags on one or another side of the conflict. Except when you'll say "maybe" to Eltrys' request, and decide not to involve yourself. Or, you don't have to do the House of Horrors quest, and serve Molag Bal. You are ordered to bring Lothrolf to the Altar, and unless you agree, you are trapped. But once You're out of the cage, he has no control over you. You can ignore the quest, or find and kill Lothrolf instead of delivering him, saying one big FU to Molag. YOU. DON'T. HAVE. TO. DO. ANYTHING! That's the power of "maybe". Yes or No are chains that bind you to the consequences of your choice. Only "maybe" offers you freedom.
This "Dov-ah-kiin" is not our future self. Back in Atmora, there was a woman who was sacrificed to try and stop the eternal winter and/or Mora's influence covering Atmora, and she had a guardian. Unslaad is the dream of the Grey Owl, who dreams of Atmora. In this dream, the Grey Owl has recreated the sacrifice & her guardian as Austella & "Dov-ah-kiin", which you can see at Dragon's Peak.
Why is it a "Dov-ah-kiin"? Well, to the Grey Owl the Dovahkiin is just the ultimate power fantasy, a unstoppable killing machine, hence the Dov-Ah-Kiin. It represents everything he wants to attain from us, & what he thinks we truly are. The the Trilogy story hammers in that we can be a catalyst for rebirth as well as destruction, that we can be more than a power fantasy. That is the difference between us and the Grey Owl/Dov-ah-kiin.
In short, the Dov-ah-kiin is a combination of the Grey Owl's concept of what you are as well as an echo of the guardian for the sacrifice to try and keep Atmora out of the ice and/or Mora's grasp.
@@scrub9986 You posted this comment three times.
This bozo has gauntlets that make Spellbreaker completely useless in comparison.
Did you play with god mode on? 🤔
Yep, looks like I accidentally left in on here. I played each fight in the trilogy a couple times to select the most "cinematic", or best looking one to upload. Must've forgotten to turn off god mode in the middle of retrying the boss again for this attempt.