The Elder Scrolls 6is one of the most anticipated releases that the video game industry has ever seen. Given the intense prior success of the franchise combined with the fact it has not received a new mainline entry in over a decade, the amount of attention and expectation that is being placed on the title is understandably massive.
With this in mind, it is no wonder that fans are attempting to learn as much aboutThe Elder Scrolls 6as they possibly can from what little official promotional material exists of the game. Many assume that the release will boldly be set within the large province of Hammerfell, and this particular area of Tamriel has a fascinating history involving the mysterious race of the Dwemer which would likely play a massive role within a Hammerfell-setElder Scrolls 6.

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The Elder Scrolls 6’s Potential Hammerfell Setting
Thesetting ofElder Scrollsgamesis a massively integral aspect of the franchise, with the history and contemporary state of a province largely shaping the core motifs and involved narratives of a given title. Most mainlineElder Scrollsgames go as far as being named after the areas they are set within, giving further credence to the sheer importance of aTEStitle’s setting.
Hammerfell is a province that has been largely unexplored within the franchise, at least within its more contemporary titles, leading many to believe thatThe Elder Scrolls 6will be set within the area. To further bolster this claim, many point to Hammerfell’s huge size as being the perfect location for a game of the likely scale and ambition thatTES 6will boast. The only official promotional footage ofThe Elder Scrolls 6comes from its 2018 announcement video, with many also thinking that the location portrayed within the teaser matches the geography of Hammerfell quite well.

The Elder Scrolls 6 Hammerfell’s Dwemer Connections
The province ofHammerfell is associated withThe Elder Scrolls' Redguard race, who colonized the location following the mysterious destruction of their home continent of Yokuda. Despite the long-time occupation of Hammerfell by the Redguard, the province was originally populated by the powerful Dwemer.
An elf-like race, the Dwemer were one of the oldest races to populate the continent of Tamriel, dating back to the earliest records of the location’s history. Crucially, theDwemer’s high level of technological and societal advancementmade them stand out, and they possessed skill and knowledge far beyond even the most contemporary understanding of the continent’s inhabitants.
Following a bloody conflict with the other first races to settle in Tamriel, the Dwemer decided to settle in what is now modern-day Hammerfell, littering the province with advanced cities and settlements. Fascinatingly, during the Battle of Red Mountain, towards the end of the First Era,the Dwemer mysteriously disappearedentirely, with this event being a hugely debated element of Tamriel’s history to this day.
The only existing elements of Dwemer society following this were their abandoned cities, which quickly fell victim to looters and invading races that filled the vacuum left by the now-absent Dwemer population. These cities were sensibly used by the Redguard following their inhabitance of the province over 100 years after the Dwemer’s disappearance, with many Redguard locations within Hammerfell having direct ties to the location’s original Dwemer population. Of course, the Redguard would go on for many Eras to shape a long and storied history within Hammerfell, but the legacy of the Dwemer remains to be an undeniably fascinating element of the province.
The Elder Scrolls 6is currently in development.
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