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RELATED: The Elder Scrolls Online Makes Major Change to End-Game Champion System It also means that some locations that exist in the lore simply aren't present in the same areas when represented in-game. The town of Nimalten can be found in the Rift in The Elder Scrolls Online, for example, but is nowhere to be seen in Skyrim. Riverwood, a tiny hamlet in The Elder Scrolls 5, is at least big enough to warrant having its own ruler - Lord Asgens - in The Elder Scrolls: Arena. This leads to vastly different scales and in-game world sizes across the different Elder Scrolls games. Tamriel has no canonically established size, however, leaving its real scale to the imagination of the players. The scaling doesn't quite line up either - if the map of Tamriel is to scale, then the Imperial city at the heart of Cyrodiil would be around the size of a small country. Indeed, while Elder Scrolls games like Skyrim use tall mountains and unnecessarily winding roads to help create an illusion of greater scale, all of the areas represented in-game across the franchise are best understood as scaled-down metaphors of the areas from the lore. The Elder Scrolls Online also does not claim to represent the entirety of Tamriel, instead allowing players access to smaller areas of each province divided by loading screens. While The Elder Scrolls Online includes areas from all nine of Tamriel's provinces, it does not create a large unbroken game world like Skyrim largely does.
