

Not knowing how many installments (or, for that matter, how long each would be) a season would consist of makes direct comparisons tricky, but suffice it to say, the company is clearly dead set on taking full advantage of the Elder Scrolls IP. There use armor that looks angelic and they use angelic looking weapons and the colors are white. Once even had both a potent and fortified on one ancestor silk. In order to join you must be good hearted, have never killed a innocent person, did not join the dark brotherhood or the thieves guild, killed 2 vampires and did not join the companies. Ive had days where RNG loves me and I find 5 or 6 in two hours. So they went from a 0.5 chance of a drop to a 1 chance. They doubled that drop rate with one tamriel to 1 in 100. To put that figure into further perspective, The Witcher‘s initial run is believed to have cost around $70-80 million in total, or approximately $10 million per episode. The drop rate prior to one tamriel for nirn was 1 in 200. To accomplish such an ambitious goal, Netflix is said to be throwing an obscene amount of money behind the project to the tune of $150 million per season. This is all according to notable insider Daniel Richtman, at least, who suggests that the streaming platform is looking to replicate the massive success enjoyed by Lauren Schmidt Hissrich’s The Witcher. Keen as ever to establish itself as the go-to destination for video game adaptations on the small screen, however, Netflix is reportedly in the early stages of creating an exclusive live-action series based on the property, no doubt in an effort to capitalize on fans’ insatiable appetite for the endlessly absent Elder Scrolls VI.
