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Oblivion the hit list
Oblivion the hit list





The Rift: Ysgramor is basically worshiped by the Fighters Guild. There's some religious shovel their people prayed to, I guess.ĭeshaan: Most of the time Dwarven artifacts are highly prized, but I have a lead on some banner that got taken down and thrown in storage around Mournhold. Unsurprisingly, they're all dead, but the Argonians still keep some artifacts around. Shadowfen: There was some strange tribe that lived out in Black Marsh alongside the Argonians. Stonefalls: One of the inns had an old coat-of-arms from the Ebonheart Pact's formation sitting in the basement. The thing's undergoing repair at their local Mages Guild. Sounds juicy.Įastmarch: The locals out in Eastmarch say that King Jorunn's commissioned some ancient piece of Dwarven technology he smashed into a centerpiece for his next banquet. Rivenspire: The Fighters Guild is supposed to have a bunch of letters the princess of Shornhelm wrote to King Emeric before he dumped her for the princess of Sentinel. I don't know why they'd just have something like that just sitting out, but use it to your advantage. Glenumbra: One of the carpets decorating Daggerfall castle is supposedly magical. We won't make you recite it.īangkorai: One of the more organized Yokudan conquerors had to use massive paperweights to wrangle all of his inventories.

oblivion the hit list

There's an unpublished book of his work archived in the Mages Guild. Stormhaven: The first king of Wayrest might have been a good king, but he was a terrible poet. Looks can be deceiving, but I have my doubts. I guess they found him, because it's collecting dust in the embassy.Īlik'r Desert: A wealthy innkeeper out in the desert has some antique bowl he claims is a family heirloom tracing his line back to some Ra Gada hero. Grahtwood: There's a mannequin that was supposed to stand in for one of the members of the Camoran dynasty when he died in battle. You have the misfortune of finding his spittoon. Reaper's March: The Mages Guild is caring for the ancient possessions of some Khajiit warrior of old at their holdings in Rawl'kha. Supposedly the Mages Guild is keeping it from bursting any eardrums in the wrong hands. Malabal Tor: There's an old Wood Elf tale about a bard so good he won a contest with a cursed harp. Rumor says it's still on display in Skywatch Manor. I guess you're supposed to water them.Īuridon: Prince Naemon had a commemorative decanter commissioned for his coronation, which never happened. Greenshade: The Mages Guild is doing restoration work on an old set of weird living books for one of the Treethanes. This is for bragging rights, not gold, so don't come to me expecting a king's bounty for any of this stuff.Ībah's Landing: The great great great-you get the idea-grandnephew of some banker back when Prince Hew was alive still has the poor sap's repossessed funeral urn sitting out as a flower pot. Put them up in the Den as proof of the deed.

oblivion the hit list

However, the Guildmaster thinks it's important for you lot to hone your skills and distinguish yourselves, so I have cataloged an inventory of one of a kind items that no one will send an army to retrieve. We REALLY don't need to attract that kind of attention right now. Thieves Den in Abah's Landing, Hew's BaneĪttention, new bloods! In the past, members of the Thieves Guild proved who the best of the bunch was by stealing the rarest, most valuable treasures they could from some of the most powerful people in Tamriel.Great songs never age and Terrorvision seldom did anything other than write and record great songs, a skill best exemplified by the frankly heroic 'Oblivion', arguably one of the very best radio-friendly rock songs to breach the UK charts over the last 20 years and a thunderous sonic thumbs-up to the power of backing vocals that go bop-bah-hoo-wop and the exceedingly tricky art of the contagious, sprightly, 100 per cent solid sunshine rock riff.

oblivion the hit list

You can tell by listening to these bold, passionate performances and the near-hysterical reaction they provoke from the crowd that an important, lasting bond had been created between this band and their legion of fans a rare achievement in times when there's a new next big thing arriving every ten minutes (and then disappearing ten minutes later). No wonder the boys' long-awaited return to the stage was greeted by a chorus of ecstatic shrieking from their still mourning fan base. Recorded at London's Kentish Town Forum on April 15th 2005, 'Hit List' is a sparkling, choon-stuffed document of a band whose demise was a real tragedy for the British rock scene, but whose contribution to our listening habits over the last few years is destined to ensure their inclusion as much more than a footnote in rock's history books.







Oblivion the hit list