Pawsi don't think there's anything wrong with seeing it like that Oblivion is what we'd call space - that blackness we see when we look up. In this blackness, the Aedric planets sit - each of the gods has a planet or satelite which look spherical to us. Su... morei don't think there's anything wrong with seeing it like that Oblivion is what we'd call space - that blackness we see when we look up. In this blackness, the Aedric planets sit - each of the gods has a planet or satelite which look spherical to us. Surrounding Oblivion (space) is Aetherius - the holes in the fabric of space (stars) allow light from Aetherius through. The Daedric realms themselves aren't like the planets and visible when we look at the sky, but they certainly must sit within Oblivion's void as part of that void. Possibly in the spaces between the planets. The difficulty is fitting infinite spaces into a finite area, it's hard to convey. less
November 30, 2018
Noodles
Maybe we'll get to briefly visit these aedric and daedric planets in starfield as cool nods to tes
November 30, 2018
Justiciar Thorien
I've always thought of them as something like separate layers of reality, kinda an underside. Which also explains, imo, how they don't have to physically fit anywhere.