Board Thread:Lore Discussion/@comment-7673575-20180409193817/@comment-35356890-20180420105820

I feel like perhaps you're being too critical of what an Elder Scroll represents. There's theoretically a near-infinite amount of Elder Scrolls. In fact there's like 200+ in the Elder Scroll library in Oblivion. They're mostly "This is a thing that could happen" and after it happens (or doesn't, given that most people have different interpretations of what they see) they say "this is what happened. Unquestionably."

While it's surprising that there are 3 scrolls that are related to this event, I believe the only one of the three that related Directly to the ToTS is Elder Scroll: Sun, as each component of Tyranny of the Sun could be seen as their own events. The Daughter of Coldharbour must first exist/be found(Elder Scroll: Blood, talks about the "Potency of ancient blood"). The Bow of Auriel may be used either to darken the sun or stop it from being darkened (Elder Scroll: Sun, remember that what Dexion views is only a single outcome of many possible ones), and The dragons will return to the realm of men, in an age of strife (The main events of the game with Alduin, Elder Scroll: Dragon) So one scroll has to do with the creation of the Daughters of Coldharbour, one to do with the sun itself, and one to do with dragons returning.

If any one of these events did not come to pass, the prophecy would not be fulfilled. In this light, it's possible to interpret that only the Elder Scroll: Sun was specifically about the Tyranny of the Sun, and that the other two on their own are only tangentially related in that they refer to events that would happen within the same time-frame or the outcome of the events of Elder Scroll: Blood and Elder Scroll: Dragon would directly impact the outcome of Elder Scroll: Sun.

Also it must be noted that Elder Scroll: Dragon is used directly in the main quest, so it can't be directly related to the ToTS, as it is related to the Return of the Dragons and isn't ever actually read during the course of Danwguard. (sun by Dexion, Blood by you)

And as the Elder Scrolls are simply records of Time and are spread across dimensions, it's entirely possible (and likely true) that there's an infinite amount of Elder Scrolls about infinitely many minor things such as the choice between eggs and bread for breakfast or bacon and bread.

''"You look to your left, you see one way. You look to your right, you see another. But neither is any harder than the opposite. But the Elder Scrolls... they look left and right in the stream of time. The future and past are as one. Sometimes they even look up. What do they see then? What if they dive in? Then the madness begins." - Septimus Signus''