Yeah, I think we're done here. You've claimed that the rest of Skyrim's monsters don't use the same scaling system as dragons [FALSE] and that the rest of Skyrim scaled a lot better due to this [FALSE] and that issues with Dragons were unique to dragons [FALSE] and that this was because their level scaling was different [FALSE].
I stopped reading here. If there was some gem of insight hidden away in the rest of your post (most of which seem to be you copy/pasting someone else's words), you've lost your opportunity to present it - because I'm not going to waste more time trying to explain that you're misinterpreting the system. Especially when you acknowledged from the start that you're only skimming my responses.
You're going to believe what you're determined to believe. That you don't understand really doesn't make any difference to me, as your opinion on the topic isn't going to change whether reality dawns on you or not. That's not even touching on the point that arguing over how Skyrim did it is pointless to begin with - as nobody (including myself) in this thread appears to be a fan of how Skyrim did it, and the last thing we want is for Divinity : OS to follow Skyrim's model. There are better ways to implement level scaling.
This entire dialogue between you and I can be summed up as such: Me implying that I didn't care for Skyrim's version of level scaling because it often felt nonexistent. You attacking/trolling me on a personal level and then insisting that I don't understand how Skyrim's level scaling worked (as if that is somehow magically going to make me like the way Skyrim did things instead). Us then getting into the equivalent of an
"am not, are too" squabble for the next several pages. My time is just too valuable to me to continue going in wasted circles with you.
Between that and your constant straw man (and personal) attacks, it's pointless for me to even continue reading your posts when other participants in the thread are bringing up more legitimate questions and responses (yet I keep wasting my time with yours - the one mistake I can actually admit to).