Personally, I think that the Rift has the prime agricultural land in Skyrim, its pretty much a forest, and as such, can sustain crops (and indeed does, it has numerous farms). While Whiterun does seem to prove capable of sustaining a serious agricultural industry, even Rorik suggests that it is not the most naturally fertile hold. Combine that with the fishing and mead industries, and you've got a hold capable of sustaining sustaining Skyrim in its own right (perhaps some work may have to go into it though).
Like I said, realistically the Rift and Falkreath, after this long, would have had huge amounts of land cleared away if the place made a lick of sense. They certainly should be far less wild than they are shown to be. Bethesda appear to have gotten hung up with this idea of 'wild Skyrim' to the extent that it is no longer at all possible to contemplate that it is supposed to be wealthy, powerful, and populous. Nords are straight up the backbone of the Empire, and have also provincially been more than powerful enough not just to compete with any other province, but continually make attempts at creating their own empire.
It's no wonder people scream until they're blue in the face that Skyrim can't hope to hold off the Thalmor, when Bethesda take a huge dump on their own background in order to portray it as bumblef*** nowhere, and the Nords themselves as barely civilised.
Also, while Whiterun's walls are collapsing, am I the only one to suggest that it doesn't need them? I sits right on top of a plateau. What will walls do, make its slightly higher? I think it should instead focus on creating a series of defenses lading up to its main gates, ad of course, occupy and rebuild Fort Greymoor.
So does the Krak des Chevaliers, and that's got walls. Walls are essential to control enemy ingress, and become even more important on such a naturally defensible position in order to make yourself even more hilariously impossible to assail. Without walls, enemies can attempt to enter the city from absolutely any point they want during a siege ('plateau' does not mean 'sheer cliffs'); combined with a general assault, this utterly negates the defenders advantages. When the enemy have obtained general access to your position like that, it's GG. It is not necessarily the deplorable state of the external walls themselves at Whiterun, but their defenses at the gate. The gate is the single most important position in the entire city, and the defenses there are more broken down than anywhere else. The Great War was only 26 years ago, there's a civil war brewing, and yet in all that time Balgruuf has quite clearly done absolutely nothing. So utterly pathetic are the fortifications at the gate, that they can in fact be entirely bypassed by scaling the hill on the other side of the road approach, which would also provide you ample cover up until you're on top of anyone stupid enough to still be out there.
Ulfric did not 'turn' in favor of the Thalmor, they interrogated (and tortured) him. Imagine (seriously, actually think about it) that you have been captured by the Nazis early in WW2 (invasion of France, Barbarossa, whatever). They believe you have important information, and torture you in order to get it. That's effectively the situation Ulfric was in.
The inability of people to grasp such an incredibly obvious and simplistic thing as the Thalmor dossier on Ulfric is....simply mind boggling to the point of willful delusion. I just cannot conceive of the mental gymnastics required to come to the conclusions people come to with it. It's absurdly clear. Ulfric captured, Ulfric tortured into dispensing information which was already useless anyway (though, he must be dumber than a rock if he never subsequently found out that the Imperial City had been taken before he was broken), Ulfric feels bad. Thalmor start considering Ulfric to be an asset. Ulfric is approached by Thalmor. Ulfric suddenly becomes 'uncooperative' and embarks on a 'kill every ****ing Thalmor in Tamriel' crusade.
Oh well obviously a guy suddenly turning 'uncooperative' to the extent of trying to cut the nipples off every Thalmor he finds, is highly indicative of him being a Thalmor agent.
"Oh hey, Ulfric, we've got an idea; kill us as much as you can. No seriously, infiltrating the Empire at some of the highest levels can't possibly be useful. Rouse up the entire province of Skyrim in religious fuelled opposition to every single one of our objectives and, by extension, every human in Tamriel. We're absolutely sure this will....somehow be more useful."
And yes, his rebellion does fall in line with their plans. However, did not the Viet Minh and Al Qaeda fall in line with the plans of the US? Just because the Thalmor want the Stormcloaks to weaken the Empire, doesn't mean that they will just create a bigger problem down the track.
As they specifically note, their plans are served only by hostilities continuing. Their plans are nailed no matter which side you resolve the issue in favour of. Either the Empire is strengthened (and if Tullius is any indication, will then be kicking off for round two), or Skyrim becomes a psychopathic military juggernaught fuelled by religious rage, pointed right at the Thalmor.
Edited by Khorak, 07 October 2012 - 05:59 PM.



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