


Sayings don’t come out of thin air, they all have an origin, and “yas queen” is no different. Now, after me-YAAAAASSSSSSS QUEEN! But what does it actually mean and where does the saying originate? In fact, you may use as many AAAs and SSSs as you wish. Of course, you cannot simply say “Yas queen,” you must elongate the As and Ss to show real enthusiasm. You’re practically celebrating someone for what they’re doing, how they look, or for what they’ve said. It’s the equivalent of saying, “fierce,” “YES” or “you do you!”

“Yas queen” is a term you say in response to someone fabulous. You’ve probably even received these kinds of comment on your latest Instagram selfies. The phrase “yas queen/kween” is plastered all over the internet. But what does it actually mean and where did the phrase originate? When Hermaeus Mora finds his library lighter than moments before, when Azura sees a prophecy change without cause, when Akatosh knows time skipped itself, when Arkay’s cycle loses too many souls, everyone looks to the Shivering Isles, where all that was never there resides.Yas queen-or YAAASSSSS QUEEN!-as many put it, is all over the internet. If Sheo can figure out precisely what stopped existing, the gods can come together and find a way to make it exist again, so long as it is deemed necessary. He is just more aware of the specific things that do not exist than other princes. I say loosely because he lacks any real control over them besides whether he chooses to acknowledge them or not. All that does not exist, from the entire Dwemer race to the value of one divided by zero falls very loosely under Sheogorath’s domain. Sheogorath, Prince of Chaos and Insanity, sees things that don’t exist and never existed all the time! Comes with being the Madgod! In the endless chaos of his realm, sometimes things that don’t and never existed visit the Isles. There’s a sense of something missing, but no one can quite tell what it is. Everything they accomplished was now done by nothing. Everything within their domain now came from nowhere. It erases that god and all memories of that god. Suppose something happens that accidentally erases a god. Reality has managed to lose civilizations, dragons, alternate timelines, and probably other things that I don’t know about yet because Elder Scrolls lore is complicated as fuck. Occasionally in Elder Scrolls, for one reason or another, reality undoes itself and things go missing. Theory: What if “Lord of the Never-There” is More Literal Than Expected?
