All the World's a Stage: So you want to be an orc
This installment of All the World's a Stage is the second in a series of roleplaying guides in which we find out all the background information you need to roleplay a particular race or class well, without embarrassing yourself.If you've seen Lord of the Rings, or read any other fantasy story in which orcs are portrayed, you probably think orcs are hideous humanoid monsters charging mindlessly forward to slaughter helpless innocents. Azerothian orcs are significantly different, however, with a shamanistic culture that prides honor above all other virtues.
But unless you've played World of Warcraft or Warcraft 3, you probably wouldn't know that. The orcs of Warcraft 1 and 2 were pretty squarely in "bad guy" territory, and it is only with the story of Thrall's rise to power and return to shamanism that we find out what the orcs' true history is.
Ironically, the story of the orcs is a bit like that of the horrors of modern Nazis and the lore of the ancient Jews mixed together. Imagine that the vast majority of your species came under the sway of a terrible and evil leader, utterly determined to commit genocide against your peaceful neighbors. After carrying out this deplorable task, your people sought a new enemy, and found a new world to destroy. In the midst of this conquest, however, your people's political leadership failed, the way back home was cut off, and you all ended up as slaves in exile, lethargic and utterly without hope. Suddenly, a hero appeared to unite your people, overcome your former masters, restore your ancient faith, reclaim your dignity, and establish a new homeland.
What follows is a brief account of the events most orcs know about or lived through, and a glimpse of the effects they would have had on your character.
The Final Solution
The opening of the Dark Portal and entry into Azeroth is even more of a defining moment for the orcs than for the humans. But for older orcs (like Drek'thar), the fall of their people began about 45 years earlier, under the respected but ill-fated leader Ner'zhul. Kil'jaeden deceived him into believing that the draenei were plotting to destroy the orcs. By the time Ner'zhul realized his folly, it was too late -- Kil'jaeden made Ner'zhul's apprentice Gul'dan into the new leader and stripped Ner'zhul of his power. The orcs were already set in motion along a path of doom, and the extermination of the draenei was already underway.
If your orc character about 70 years old, he or she would have been born at about the time Kil'jaeden started to corrupt the orcs, growing up during the greatest changes in the history of their race, and witnessing their trainformation from a spiritual race into a genocidal maniacs. Such an elderly character might have early memories about about how Ner'zhul was deposed and Gul'dan came to power by uniting the clans into a single Horde and guiding his puppet Blackhand to become the first Warchief. He or she would also remember the number of shamans declining as Gul'dan taught warlock magic to more and more orcs, as well as the defining moment when Gul'dan invited all the orcs to drink the blood of Mannoroth, bringing all those who drank under control of the Burning Legion. Orgrim Doomhammer refused to drink, and Durotan even forbade the entire Frostwolf clan from drinking, which brought down great suspicion upon them.
Exile
If your character was a member of the Frostwolf clan, he would have had to watch while Durotan continued to voice opposition to the war against the draenei, the attack on Shattrath, and even the passage through the Dark Portal to conquer Azeroth. If your character was part of any other clan, however, she would have been consumed with blood rage like all the rest, and would have taken part in the horrors of the genocide, as well as the First and Second Wars. In the present time, looking back at those days, she may be filled with the same deep shame and regret, just like Drek'thar. An orc born closer to the opening of the Dark Portal, 25 years prior to the setting of World of Warcraft, would have been raised in this bloodthirsty environment and would have been given the blood of Mannoroth as soon as possible -- unless he or she was a Frostwolf. The Frostwolves were exiled to the Alterac Mountains as soon as the Horde entered Azeroth. Here was the last remaining refuge for orcish shamanism, as Drek'thar finally turned away from the path of the warlock and regained the favor of the spirits. Thrall was also born here, around the same time that Orgrim Doomhammer killed Blackhand and made himself the new Warchief. When Durotan was killed, and his son thought lost, Drek'thar kept the Frostwolves going until Thrall finally returned many years later and brought renewal not only to the Frostwolves, but to the entire orcish race. If your character is a Frostwolf, he would be extremely proud of his leader and his people about now, having gone through a great deal of suffering in order to reach this point in history.
The rest of the orcs, however, did not fare so well. Things seemed to be going well after the First War, when the orcs headed north to finish off the humans in Lordaeron. During a time when Gul'dan was weak, Orgrim Doomhammer killed Blackhand and took over leadership of the Horde, forcing Gul'dan to submit to him. Later on, however, Gul'dan betrayed Orgrim and took off with a third of the Horde army in search of the Tomb of Sargeras. This left the door open for the newly formed Alliance to breach the ranks of the Horde plowing all the way back to the Dark Portal and destroying it. The humans reduced these orcs to slavery and kept them in internment camps, and, thus denied more access to the blood of Mannoroth, the orcs went into severe withdrawal and lethargy. Only Grom Hellscream's Warsong clan managed to remain free, hiding out in the wilds of Lordaeron, fighting the weakening listlessness of Mannoroth's blood curse until he met up with Thrall about 15 years after the end of the second war.
Let my people go
Thrall's story is not one that I could do justice to in this article, but if you're roleplaying an orc, it would do you a lot of good to know it. Check out Know Your Lore's two-part retelling of that story, and think about what your character was doing when those events were taking place. Were you fighting the withdrawal effects of the blood curse with Grom Hellscream when Thrall showed up after his escape? Were you in the Alterac Mountains with Drek'thar when Thrall returned to his clan? Were you freed by Thrall and Orgrim Doomhammer as they went from camp to camp liberating the orcs? However you met up with him, you probably traveled with the Horde in their exodus across the sea to Kalimdor -- but were you with Thrall's group or with Grom Hellscream's? Did you do when you met up with the Darkspear trolls on the islands near the Maelstrom? Did you aid the tauren in their battles with the centaurs? Or did you travel with Grom Hellscream's Warsong clan and confront the humans under Jaina Proudmoore? Did you stand with Thrall or with Grom Hellscream after Grom had once again drunk of Mannoroth's blood and tainted his clan? How did you feel when Grom slew Mannoroth and lifted the blood curse from your race? Where were you during the Battle of Mount Hyjal?Perhaps more than any other race, the majority of the orcs can say that they shared in common most of the important experiences of the Third War (excepting of course, those elements we talked about last time involving humans and the Scourge). Since the end of that story, most of the orcs would consider Orgrimmar their new home -- but it is very important to remember that none of them could possibly have been born there, since Thrall founded new orcish nation of Durotar after defeating the Burning Legion. Older orcs would have been born in one of the regions of Draenor (which were very different prior to its becoming "Outland"), while younger orcs would have either been born somewhere in the conquered lands of Southeastern Azeroth (perhaps even the ruined Stormwind itself), or in one of the internment camps that orcs were later removed to.
Durotar has very much of a "Promised Land" feeling about it to those who believe in Thrall and in his cause -- but not all orcs are Thrall's devoted disciples. Especially if you are playing a warlock, you may live on the fringes of modern orcish society, continuing activities the Warchief has tried to forbid, including dark magic, slavery, and perhaps a lingering bloodthirstiness.
One final note: orcs sometimes have an undeserved and incorrect reputation for being incredibly stupid. This is probably caused by the image of orcish peons walking around doing menial tasks and speaking with poor grammar (i.e. "Me not that kind of orc!"). Remember: the peons who speak that way are a kind of "untouchable" class within orcish society, who are reduced to menial labor because of limited capacity, mental or otherwise. Thrall believes that they have the same potential as all the other orcs and is trying to improve their condition, but it is still unlikely that such an orc could rise to be a great adventurer just yet.
For further reading about the orcs, check out WoWWiki's mostly good (but sometimes inconsistent) information about the orcs and their various heroes, as well as the much-simplified Dramatis-Personae page on creating an orc of your very own, and if you are a member of Dramatis-Personae's roleplaying forums (as I suggest you should be), you can even read this thoroughly researched outline of various orcish clans and choose which clan your orc belongs to (or you can read about the clans on WoWWiki as well)! You may also find this updated timeline at WoWWiki useful as a reference.
Filed under: Horde, Orcs, Lore, Guides, RP, All the World's a Stage (Roleplaying)
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Reader Comments (Page 4 of 4)
David Bowers Aug 25th 2008 8:36PM
Hmm. Well I had been planning to do another Alliance race next, but it seems like there's more people wanting to read about Horde races... What's up with that? We'll have to see.
Alderkin Aug 25th 2008 3:58PM
One correction I would make here: There were still a few survivors of the Stormreaver Clan that were not interred, nor fighting alongside the Warsong Clan following the second war. Some may have been in hiding like Drak'thul in the Broken Isles (not to be confused with Drek'thar of the Frostwolves).
Other Stormreavers can be found in Warcraft III as 'neutral creeps', not openly hostile to any faction. Perhaps the lethargy hit them like the orcs who were interred, or perhaps the shock of barely escaping the both the Tomb of Sargeras demons and Orgrim's forces took the fight out of them.
A possible RP angle here would be a Stormreaver warlock who's tired of wandering and hiding, and for some reason has chosen to take part in the new Horde instead of the Shadow Council.
Mac Aug 25th 2008 5:36PM
When you talk about the light and the three races that can use it. Can you discuss why there is not another horde race that can use it? I hate blood elfs. I really wanted a horde pali, but I refuse to roll one because I hate belfs that much. I'm not a roll player. I just wanted an undead pali. I thought that since humans can play pali, and undead used to be humans, why can't undead be pali too? Its stupid that they have 2 races on ali that can be pali and they limit it to belfs for horde.
Mac Aug 25th 2008 5:41PM
edit: correction, 3 ali races, not 2.
ILikePvPbuthatePvPers Aug 26th 2008 10:18AM
Because undead can't wield the Light lore-wise. DUH. It literally hurts/kills them if they try.
And lemme guess, you hate Blood Elves because they look "gay", right? Eat shit.
Namus Aug 25th 2008 6:40PM
I think that's more of a religious subject for the lore of the game, orcs were into shamanism before the demon-frenzy and seems to be returning to their roots, trolls have been influenced by orcs into the same thing, and before that there were into vodoo magics and stuff, same nature-loving religious views goes for the tauren, and I don't know but the forsaken seems to be released of the Lich King's control but they still retain some evil or anger or a desire for revenge, whatever they call it and one of the canons of the holy light is "bringing happiness to others", so I think they are too far away from the light to become paladins (besides who would trust an undead casting exorcism?)
Alc Aug 25th 2008 8:03PM
For some reason, at least unknown to the mortal races, only certain races can learn the abilities of a paladin. Those were dwarves, humans, and then the space goats up in the sky. Not even high elves could be paladins and this often enraged certain high elves. This particular fact really adds to anyone wanting to RP a blood elf paladin. Being able to attain something that was previously unattainable to your race. Theoretically speaking, it may have been the race's arrogance, or perhaps that the intelligence/s (naaru?) behind the light denied them for some reason.
squeama Aug 25th 2008 5:38PM
My question is, why do Horde and Alliance still fight against one another when they both face the same outside threats to their survival? In the Burning Crusade and Wrath of the Lich King, their existence is threatened by forces that transcend their differences, yet the factions are more than happy to attack each other. When will we see a unification of Horde and Alliance, and peace on Azeroth between the races?
Mac Aug 25th 2008 5:48PM
I go for this if they opened up pvp for my own faction. Then I could kill Blood Elfs too.
Namus Aug 25th 2008 6:32PM
I think they have old hatreds and grudges going on for such a long time that they are not easily forgotten, for example the dead of Cenarius in the hand of the orcs is something that the night elfs are not going to forget very soon, same goes for a human born in Stormwind, after watching the horde destroying your homeland, killing your king and even ganking on Lothar (epic battle with Doomhamer my *ss), not to speak of the thousands of years of conflicts between elfs and trolls, actually its a miracle that they actually stand together when the situation calls for it.
Alc Aug 25th 2008 8:06PM
There are a few other considerations to take into account as an Orc. These primary have to do with the beginning of Warcraft 3. It seems that Blizzard wanted to change the Orcs as a whole and not all the threads made connections so you'll have to assume or ignore things. One, is that Thrall collected the clans in a relatively short amount of time (perhaps Blizzard originally only intended for some of the clans to be liberated). This amount of time may be as short as a couple of days, a feat which would have been impossible to do when considering travel time alone (not to mention the guards, armies, etc in the way). Another thing, is that no horrible things have been shown about the internment camps (unless stated in a one of the novels). There are some exceptions like that of Thrall but the camps under the control the alliance as a whole, probably didn't have slavery (forced labor). The Orc's lethargy combined with the rising costs of the camps suggest that labor was not involved (slavery has usually been associated with profit). Though other things could be assumed since the Orcs had been very violent and bloodthirsty for quite some time. Revenge by their caretakers would be easy to imagine. Lastly, the current state of the Orcs. Although they no longer carry the demonic bloodthirst (for the most part), their actions do continue on. Bloody arenas and slavery are common (as shown in recent comics). But when one has grown up with nothing but, old habits can be hard to break. As an orc, you'll have to keep in mind that your society is in a huge state of transition. These bloodthirsty urges are still present but you are trying to learn a new way of life (or not).
David Bowers Aug 25th 2008 8:39PM
These are all good points. Thanks for adding that.
Alc Aug 25th 2008 8:50PM
Oh, also for those RPing a frostwolf, your homeland (er.. the land they currently occupy in the eastern kingdoms), was originally under the control of a human kingdom called Alterac. This kingdom betrayed the alliance and sided with the horde. They were eventually wiped out (by the alliance and i think the horde too). So your clan has claimed the area of Alterac, but there will be humans who are part of the original alterac, or allies (or the alliance themselves), that will vie (sp?) for control of the area.
Badger Aug 25th 2008 11:45PM
Alc: Don't worry, you spelled "vie" correctly. Also, those were great posts!
Pockletock Aug 26th 2008 2:16AM
Gnomes next! Gnomes next! Can I write it and you put your name on it?
~Not Pockletock
David Bowers Aug 26th 2008 2:04AM
Hi Pockletock! You could give me lots of suggestions (and those are very welcome)! But I can't let you just write the article for me. Sorry!
Sae Oct 19th 2008 5:50PM
Not sure if this comment will be seen this later after the article has been published, but I'm curious;
How old would an orc who was born in an internment camp be? I poked around on WoWiki and tried to find some dates, but I haven't been able to come to any accurate conclusion...
bluebman05 Nov 2nd 2008 7:57AM
5 to 19 yrs is the best guess. 19 years is the rough time estimate between the creations of the camps and the very start of the WoW events. So I can see orcs up to age 25 growing up there too.
And if he was just born just before the Thrall's liberation, he'd be about 5 now.
Olgreenbeard Apr 28th 2009 1:00PM
David or anyone really,
I am beginning to develop a back story for an orc warrior I would like to RP, one possibly born in the ruins of stormwind before being taken back by the alliance. Then if possible being placed into one of the internment camps and liberated by Thrall and Orgim. Which clan affiliation would an orc of this circumstance fit, my knowledge of lore is a bit weak to accurately decide.
Any other suggestions you might have for a character like this feel free to give. I'm all ears.
Also are comments like this the best means of getting into contact with experienced RP'rs like you all or are there better means