Board Thread:General Discussion/@comment-11276487-20130713025241/@comment-11345660-20130929182627

You seem to be not very well versed in the Primordial Lore my dear Derp Steak. Uh, no, mortals are not more powerful than the Aedra. We just chose certain points where they were weak. Dagon was away from his homeland when he was defeated, thus allowing a weak Akatosh to defeat him, we defeated Jyggalag while he was fresh off of being Sheogorath, and we defeated Alduin because the Dragonborn had power to match Alduin himself, but he is not really mortal because of that. Yes, Humans have a certain quality about them. We are good at picking the right moments to strike.

THe Aedra were omnipotent at a time before Lorkhan drained their powers to create Nirn. Magnus, being the god of Magic, pulled out in time and ripped a hole right into Aethirus, making the sun. So, he still retains his power, and there is no limit to magic, so Magnus is Omnipotent.

Akatosh, along with the other divines, were incapacitated from creating Nirn, with their powers drained, they are confined to their own planes, what mortals on Nirn see as planets.

And Dagon looked plenty powerful to me when he was walking around Cyrodil. Only a god was able to defeat him. And how do you know Akatosh was gasping for air?

Invincable means that no harm can ever befall you. Dagon had Akatosh's hand to his throat. You defeated Jyggalag. The Daedra are not invincible.

Again, Magnus pulled out of Nirn just in time to retain his magical power. He still has all the magic in the universe, translating into, you guessed it, power.

If the Aedra's powers were so powerless, then Akatosh would not have been able to defeat Dagon.