The Care and Feeding of Warriors - Death to Cyclonian!

The Care and Feeding of Warriors normally opens with an attempt at levity, but today Matthew Rossi is all business, because today we're going to talk about the enemy, the bane of all mid-level warriors, and the guy no high level warrior would resent coming back to kill again, and again, and again. Face Cyclonian and claim your reward!
All classes have quests, of course. The level 50 quests come to mind, as do the ones for Paladins to learn how to resurrect, or the various ones Shamans have to do to gain their totems. In writing the Totem Talk about shaman quests, however, I started thinking about the kinds of quests warriors get. I could have covered the stance quests, of course, but those are really just preludes. There's only one quest warriors care about.
Getting the Whirlwind weapon.
Killing Cyclonian.
A level 40 elite elemental who does impressive magical-based, AC ignoring damage and who uses a cyclone-based form of CC to hold you still while he beats you down. Many a warrior goes into this quest not understanding just how hard this mob hits only to get slaughtered. If, like me, you happen to have done this quest way back in the day before Wowhead, when no one checked Thottbot, when there were no Wiki's to consult and not that many players your level or higher on any server, then Cyclonian was more than a rude surprise. He was a hurricane of pain, and he tore your face clean off.
And that was after you'd already worked like a dog to get the right to face him, too.
I have several warriors who have gotten past Cyclonian. In my time I've fought him on a human, a night elf, an orc, a tauren, a draenei and an undead. (The undead later got deleted. Yes, I deleted a level 47 warrior. Sorry, I just couldn't get my head into playing an undead.) And yet, every time I fight him, I get that same small sinking feeling in the pit of my gut. If you'd faced him back in the day, before we knew everything, you'd understand. That first fight with the Cyclonian was a harsh teacher which beat it into your head that no, warriors are not all powerful. Watching your health drop like a stone falling from a blimp while he blasted magic damage right past your useless armor was the definition of 'a learning experience'.
And yet, every warrior does the Cyclonian, as soon as they can get the quest they start grinding the materials. Why?
Because of these. There are slightly better weapons available at the level in Scarlet Monastery, but those are instance drops or quest items from killing the four main heads of the Crusade, and require luck or several runs to complete. But for a warrior, these three weapons are both a status symbol and a way to 'twink' yourself... with even a little help you can get through the quest chain that leads to the Whirlwind weapon of choice.
From the moment I saw another warrior with the Whirlwind Sword in IF I wanted it. I was level 22 at the time, the game hadn't really been out very long, and I remembered asking him where he'd gotten it. He told me he'd gotten it from a warrior quest that started at level 30, and said words I should have heeded: bring some help.
The quest chain starts in a straightforward manner. Once you complete the Berserker Stance quest The Affray on Fray Island, you receive the quest The Windwatcher, which sends you up the river from Southshore or Tarren Mill to the Alterac Mountains. There, a crazy old troll shaman tells you that he wants to get to meet the great Cyclonian, and oh, by the way, would you mind killing him once he shows up? Now, any sane person might well choose to tell him to stuff it and go back to questing for someone a little more stable, but Bath'rah the Windwatcher knows his audience, and he dangled before your fresh-faced level 30 face the promise of three weapons if you'll just do a few things before him. Since you chose to play a warrior, we already know that:
A - you like shiny things.
B - you don't really mind killing things for random strangers.
C - you lack the self-preservation instinct of a brain damaged marsupial.
So you found yourself either picking flowers or cruising the AH for Liferoot, killing Bloodscalps in STV for their tusks (which you were probably going to do anyway) and harvesting various elemental charms from the entities that protect the stone rings in the nearby Arathi Highlands. The worst part about collecting the charms was, no where in the quest text does it tell you that you need to do that - you actually had to read the parchment that Bath'rah gave you! You had to pay attention to the questgiver! For most of us young warriors, this was adding insult to injury, but we did it anyway. If, like me, you did most of this solo you probably ended up gaining a few levels doing all this, and you were feeling pretty powerful when you reported back to Bath'rah ready to make the Essence of the Exile. You'd run around Stranglethorn Vale and Arathi collecting these items, after all, and at last you were ready to go up against Cyclonian. Sure, he was probably higher level than you, but you'd done The Affray and come out of it intact. You were ready.
Well, you thought you were ready.
After the Cyclonian handed your your own buttocks (he even had a nice decorative wall mount for them, so you could place them in player housing in case that ever came into the game) you realized that if you were going to wait to be able to solo this guy, you'd probably be using a better weapon and be a much higher level character by then. Nope, there was no way around it - back in the days before quests were so nice as to obligingly tell you to group up, you were going to have to heed that advice and get some help.
After a while, of course, the Cyclonian questline got nerfed. Not by Blizzard this time, though. No, the community itself would get together and nerf it, effectively, because everyone who leveled some other class first and then decided they would level a warrior and tell you over and over again how easy it was (while of course having the resources of a level 60 character to buy the best gear while you leveled wearing 'of the whale' greens because that's what dropped for you - go ahead, mighty twinks, try and finish a few quest decked out in whatever you can scrounge from quests and drops because there wasn't anything in the AH back then, not that I'm bitter. Oh, and we played WoW going uphill both ways in the snow, too. And we liked it.) weren't going to try and actually solo that questline. As soon as they hit 30 they had guildmates running them through STV, were buying charms and liferoot off of the AH and were running to Alterac with a 60 or two in tow to take out the Cyclonian and get their sword.
I once rode by and saw the Cyclonian kill a level 60 rogue who had not understood that he could still be held motionless by the CC and didn't take the fight seriously. Even with a massive level disadvantage, you did not want to let the Cyclonian just pound on you. A few unlucky failures to resist and you'd end up dead. Still, while I personally refused to help people twink their way through the questline, mostly out of bitterness that I hadn't thought of it myself, I did still ride by and see if any warriors were actually plucky enough to try and solo it.
There's nothing like charging in and bashing a Sulfuras over the Cyclonian's head just in time to save a poor level 34 warrior who had no idea what he was in for. Turns disaster into hope, brings joy to the multitude (okay, to one guy) and gives you a measure of the pure satisfaction that only killing the Cyclonian can provide. Even today, at level 70, I still make sure to ride by that spot by the river whenever I'm in Alterac for any reason. And if I see a warrior trying to kill the Cyclonian... be he Horde or Alliance, be he Undead or Dwarf, in that place and in that time he or she is my brother or my sister, my fellow in a band of metal-clad, weapon-bearing souls who have taken up a challenge set before them by a crazy old shaman in a dilapidated shack by the side of a river patrolled by a rare spawn dragon that never failed to show up the second you decided to go up river.
I kept that sword until I just couldn't justify using it anymore. I had an Arcanite Champion that I replaced it with. I had Bonebiter, then a Lord Alexander's Battle Axe, and finally a Twig of the World Tree and I used this sword over all of them if I could get away with it because it was my sword. You don't get that kind of feeling often in this game... gear is to be replaced the second an upgrade is available... but I swear, if I could have done it without dying constantly I'd still be using it. It's in my bank now. My orc has the Whirlwind Axe banked, my tauren the Hammer, my NE the sword again, my draenei went with the axe and got it enchanted with Demonslaying just for looks, still wears it around IF when he's not doing anything. There's a coolness to the weapon that transcends its DPS, that lasts forever if you didn't get rushed through the quest to just pick up a fast twink weapon.
If you earned it, you'll never want to let it go. There are better weapons, but there aren't many weapons that will mean more to a warrior than this one does, especially when you get it. You'll see Paladins with Bonebiter and Shamans with Ravager, you'll even see Hunters with the Sword of the Magistrate. But nobody but one of us will ever wield a Whirlwind weapon. You'll wear it so that everyone can see what they can't ever have. You'll wear it to show your fellow warriors that you're one of them, one of the killers of the wind lord.
But bring friends. Cyclonian waits for you, and he hits like ten devils and laughs at your feeble weapon. Luckily, you've got a better one coming.
Filed under: Warrior, Quests, Lore, NPCs, (Warrior) The Care and Feeding of Warriors






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
4STR4STALeatherBelt Sep 21st 2007 11:42AM
Great article. Always remember doing that quest with my first ever toon. Good memories.
jaxson_bateman Sep 21st 2007 11:49AM
A touching story, and nice to know that one quest and piece of loot still continues to have such an effect on you. =)
I don't really have any stories that significant... my last two mains have been pallies (human pre-BC, BE nowadays) and the level 60 epic mount quests were both quite unique and fun. The human one was definately more challenging as you couldn't get any higher levels to help you with it - you were the highest level! But the final event in Scholo to actually obtain the Charger was one of the most unique fights you'd ever find, and was quite fun. Whilst the BE questline wasn't so absorbing, it was with pride that I solo'd the final part of the event in Strath in the mid-60's. Something about a Blood Knight consecrating five or so Knights of the Silver Hand to death is beautiful...
Urofseron Sep 21st 2007 11:57AM
Pfft....
Warlock mount quest
Best quest ever.
skazarl Sep 21st 2007 12:26PM
yep, I've hit level 70 long ago, and I still sport this WW axe where ever I go. any warrior who trashes this puppy should be shot. this weapon is as much part of a warrior as his own flesh and bones.
Cohn Sep 21st 2007 12:38PM
Great column - makes me want to level my warrior just to run this quest line. Well, that, and constantly sitting in LFG waiting for a tank :P
Bentas Sep 21st 2007 12:50PM
Pass.
It sort of requires you to be arms spec, since all the rewards are two handers. I was fury spec for awhile, so it was useless to me when I first became eligible for the quest, and then switched over to protection spec, which is decent for not just instances but levelling too. Neither of those specs calls for a two hander.
So at 45 I still haven't deleted the quest from my log but I probably will. I just have no use for those weapons, and feel it's slightly insulting to 2/3rds of the warrior specs to assume we want a 2 hander.
Or am I missing something?
Rulan Sep 21st 2007 12:52PM
Great story.
I will never forget getting my epic bow and staff on my hunter. That quest line was a ton of fun.
Thadski Sep 21st 2007 1:21PM
I remember running around Thunder Bluff in my low 30's when a 55 warrior (thanks Niamh!) took one look at my weapon, sent a party invite and said "come with me." Thankfully I'd already collected all the Bloodscalp Tusks, but she ran me through getting the charms and the liferoot, then tanked the Cyclonian for me. She even stuck around for three tries (we had some trouble with a few lvl 60 gnome rogues ganking us right after we summoned the boss :P)
That was the first time someone I'd never so much as spoken to devoted an afternoon to helping me on a quest that I would never have finished on my own. Ever since then I make it a point to find the occasional level 30 warrior and take him under my wing. Sounds goofy, but it's like a rite of passage or something :)
Junzim Sep 21st 2007 1:32PM
Now that's what WoW's all about :)
MechChef Sep 21st 2007 1:44PM
There only a few items that hold a place in my heart that I don't think I'll ever get rid of. I shouldn't have vendored my Sword of the Omen, as I used it for so long. But I kept my Coldrage dagger, Legion Headguard of the Monkey, and Terokk's Mask (aka the Blood elf Bandit Mask on steroids).
tiny_tetley Feb 13th 2008 8:41PM
I used that axe till level 51. I did not want to let go. I levelled my warrior while everyone was doing 60-70 and remember numerous posts I made on my guild forums, crying for help.
Eventually, my husband, who is a hunter, came and helped and then realized why I was hurting and wanted to give up.
Great article
Verit Sep 21st 2007 1:55PM
There were a bunch of warlock quests I remember that were pretty good. The sucubus quest - where I had to venture out into badlands (never having played the game before) it was kinda scary. Got owned by some hunter too...
The warlock epic quest was pretty fun, as well as the infernal quest.
I got to relive some of those earlier moments when I decided to get the summon doom-guard spell at lvl 70. 2 manned all of it with my priest friend.
Dave Sep 21st 2007 1:59PM
@6:
Yeah, you're missing something... and that's the idea that Arms is going to pretty much be vastly superior to a Fury build until you hit your mid 50's, and even then it's debateable. You really need a lot to compensate for the dual wield penalties, and if you're not going to run the L60 instances to get the right kinda gear... you're going to be an overall better warrior if you're rockin a big 2H.
I kept my WW axe from L31 to L51, when I promptly got the Ice Barbed Spear from AV and I kept that thing until I finally found some useful weapons at 60. You can keep jacking up your damage output through more STR on the rest of your gear, and few weapons really are much more worthwhile than those two. I think the game would benefit a lot more by having a quest every 15 levels or so that would hook you up with a very good weapon that you don't need to instance to get. I was pretty disappointed in the Mage L50 stuff to be honest, it was nowhere near as cool as hauling in the WW Axe on my warrior in my 30's.
chris.babin Sep 21st 2007 2:12PM
"The worst part about collecting the charms was, no where in the quest text does it tell you that you need to do that"
No, the worst part was where they forgot to tell you that you'd have to fight an endless wave of 60s in order to collect the fire charms, because those fire elementals were camped pre-TBC non-stop for the Elemental Fire that they dropped.
Bentas Sep 21st 2007 2:38PM
@13
My point is that not everyone plays the game the same way. I probably will agree with you that Arms is superior to Fury initially, as I was initially Arms before I tried Fury, and eventually fell into Protection. My problem with this quest is that it only validates that one playstyle for your entire 40's essentially, lacking other gear.
Myself, I have the Sword of Omen and the Aegis of the Scarlet Commander giving me simliar stats to the quest reward weapons, with 10 less dps, but a ton more armor. It may be playstyles, but I found my survivability soloing has improved considerably as a protection spec warrior in my 40's rather than other specs, particularly fury. As Prot spec I have very little downtime and it takes alot to kill me. Whereas a swarm of 3-4 mobs would spell fairly certain death as an arms/fury warrior, I'm not worried as a prot spec. Sure it takes a little longer to kill things as the dps is a full 10 lower than those weapons, but I make up for it in survivability.
Plus people I run instances with love that I'm actually Protection spec and not a fury or arms spec pretending to use a shield.
Each to their own. If you like playing Arms or Fury then a player should by all means do so. I can see the arguments for Arms being superior to Fury in the 40's but Protection I think is very valid. Maybe I'm in the minority, but I don't see why an option of the class should be ignored by supposedly so important a quest line.
Smoke1400 Sep 21st 2007 2:41PM
I tried to kill him all by self, the fight didn't last long. I did manage to get him to about half health. So I asked my guild for help and a 49 rogue came and we crushed him, I think I was 33 at the time can't remember. I had to grid to get the charms, AH didn't have any. I loved that sword. I just replaced it with Blade of the Titans. Had for like 11 lvls, I still have it tho, can't bring myself to sell it.
Heraclea Sep 21st 2007 4:34PM
Like some of the others, I did the quest - a passing 60 helped - got the weapon, used it a couple times, and then eventually vended it. I had already decided on a fury/prot build as what I wanted to use, so this was more or less irrelevant to my own needs. Now I used the Sword of Serenity, which I got around the same time, until at least the 50-something levels, first as a main hand, next as an offhand. Great sword, lots of good memories, largely because it actually looked like a useful sword rather than some baroque meat cleaver.
Probably the worst weapon I ever used was Herod's axe from Scarlet Monastery, which I had around the same time. In theory it looked great. If it hurts half as much as it did in Herod's hands. . . In practice, I found myself spinning helplessly as wounded mobs limped off to aggro others, or start casting their stupid magic tricks. The bad taste left by that weapon is one of the things that made me choose builds based on wielding one or more one handers.
Steve Hall Sep 21st 2007 4:37PM
A warrior friend and I went to do that quest. We got our butts handed to us (I think I was playing my rogue) twice. The third time we showed up, there were a couple Horde (shaman & warrior, I think; we are Alliance). The Shaman pointed to Cyclo and then at my friend; he then pointed at Cyclo and HIS warrior friend.
*click* Who says you can't group across factions? In no time at all, the four of us had taken Cyclo down twice, and quite easily, too! That remains one of my favorite memories of WoW so far.
Urthona Sep 21st 2007 7:49PM
When I was killing Cyclonian on my human warrior, I had to ask myself why I was doing the Air Totem quest.
Regardless of the fun and craziness of the Fray Island adventure, examine the scenario:
1. A warrior is given the quest by a troll shaman, named Bath'rah the Windwatcher.
1. Fighting trolls, most of whom are of a distinctly shamanistic persuasion in Stranglethorn Vale, near Grom'Gol.
2. Collecting Liferoot in Swamp of Sorrows, near Stonard.
3. Destroying elementals of every variety in Arathi Highlands, near Hammerfall.
4. Defeating an incredibly difficult Air Elemental, near Tarren Mill.
(I know the argument can be made that there are Alliance "towns" in/near all those zones as well... It still felt like I was in enemy territory the whole time.)
After running a shaman to 40 on Horde and feeling the letdown of the level 30 air totem quest, I'm forced to assume that maybe...
The quest designers for the shaman class made the level 30 Air Totem quest so interesting that the Game Editors decide that it needed to be spread across both factions, and given to the class that had little to no real class lore.
Thoughts?
rudy06 Sep 21st 2007 9:28PM
@12, totally agree with you on the lock succbus quest in badlands, I was also a newbie to the game when i went venturing into the badlands. The epic mount for locks is also very cool, as the final fight in Dire Maul is so much fun. I remember getting that done 2 days before BC came out so that I wouldn't have to run around on my regular mount. And now I help out anyone who needs it to get their mount.