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The Elder Scrolls Online celebrates its 10th anniversary a year late by selling off 2,000 pieces of its servers

Videogames have always been cavalier with numbers. For decades, series like Final Fantasy and Unreal Tournament have brazenly ignored the fundamentals of sequel ordering, not to mention the whole ‘making art with mathematics’ thing videogames are wont to do. But now they’ve started playing fast and loose with the concept of anniversaries too, and I simply refuse to accept it.

Nightdive Studios started this trend by recently unveiling its 25th anniversary remaster of System Shock 2, which is actually coming out 26 years after launch. Now, Bethesda has announced it is selling shards of The Elder Scrolls Online’s servers to celebrate the game’s 10th anniversary, which was in April last year. You can’t have a birthday that lasts a whole year, Bethesda! Even a five-year-old wouldn’t try to swing that one.

Nonetheless, Bethesda has forged ahead with The Elder Scrolls Online 10-year anniversary server keepsake, which was announced earlier this week (via Kotaku). According to the keepsake’s page on the Bethesda website, this has been created for players who wish for “something truly meaningful to commemorate over a decade of adventure with friends” (one year over a decade, to be specific) letting them own an “actual physical piece of The Elder Scrolls Online history.”

An image of the Elder Scrolls Online 10th anniversary keepsake, depicting the framed RAM stick with its zinc alloy plaque, alongside the holographic sticker and certificiate of authenticity.

(Image credit: Bethesda)

That ‘piece’ is specifically a disused stick of RAM removed from one of The Elder Scrolls Online’s server racks. Of course, it won’t just be sent to you in a jiffy bag. It comes neatly framed alongside a shiny zinc alloy commemorative plate engraved with ESO’s ouroboros logo and the (temporally inaccurate) declaration “10 Years”. The whole package costs $110, which personally I would put toward some brand new sticks of RAM for my increasingly decrepit PC. But if you’re a die-hard Elder Scrolls Online fan, I can see the appeal.

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