All the World's a Stage: So you want to be a troll
This installment of All the World's a Stage is the third 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.Trolls are based on the "wild savages" you've seen in the movies or on TV, from King Kong to Discovery channel. If you've seen people hunting with spears, walking around in the forest without many clothes on, or dancing around in costumes and face paint in some kind of ritual you've never heard of, you've seen the apparent inspiration for trolls in World of Warcraft. The culture of Warcraft trolls are a mishmash of all the different myths and rumors that have grown up about some of the earth's indigenous peoples that live outside modern society: Strange voodoo beliefs and rituals? Check. Bloodthirsty headhunters with a taste for cannibalism? Check. Witch doctors, shrunken heads, human sacrifice, and rampant superstition? Check on all counts.
It's important to note here that troll culture is based on the myths about some indigenous people, not on their reality. Cannibalism, for instance, has been rare among human societies, nearly always viewed as anathema, but among the trolls of Azeroth, it appears to be the rule rather than the exception. Unbiased study of the world's primal religions has shown them to be far more sophisticated than early (and prejudiced) Western explorers ever imagined. Don't listen to the Jamaican accent trolls have in the game and assume that trolls are based on real life Jamaicans. There is nowhere near the correlation here that we might find with the dwarves and the Scots, or even the draenei and the eastern Europeans that they sound like. Indeed, one could argue that the choice of a Jamaican accent to represent the trolls and their culture reveals a great deal of ignorance we Americans have regarding Caribbean islanders -- but that's a discussion I'll not go into today.
Suffice it to say that as a member of the Darkspear tribe, the only tribe of trolls to join the Horde, your character living in a time of great change for your people. Your tribe is the first to embrace the more modern values promoted by Thrall, to take up the spiritual practices of shamanism, and to integrate itself with other races. Although the Darkspears have officially given up human sacrifice, cannibalism, and now tell you to "stay away from the voodoo," these practices are all elements of religion and superstition that your character would have grown up with, and may find it hard to let go of completely.
"I heard if you cut off an extremity, it'll regenerate a little bigger..."
First, a note about troll biology: As you know, trolls are famous for their tusks, big ears, and for their tall and lithe look -- males stand at about 7 feet tall when they're not hunching over. You also may have heard that they have the ability to recover from any injury, and even regenerate severed appendages! What you may not have known is that troll skin is not necessarily what it appears to be at first. Trolls are divided up into different groups depending on which environment they have adapted to: Ice, sand, forest and jungle. Ice trolls have white skin that almost blends in with the snow, while sand trolls have scorched, dry skin, beaten down by the harsh desert environment. So far no surprise there -- but forest trolls possess a strange mutation that makes moss grow on their skin, thus resulting in their odd green color. As for the jungle trolls, which is the group all Darkspear trolls originally came from, their bodies are covered in a short, soft fur which gives them their blueish or purplish coloration. Remember that the next time you hug a troll (and survive) -- not only is he tall and deadly, he's also soft and cuddly too!
"The way to a man's heart be through his stomach, but I go through the rib cage."
And now we turn to trollish history -- and here we get something of a reprieve from the convoluted path that the orcs have taken, as the history of the trollish brethren in the Horde is much simpler. This is notwithstanding that trolls may very well be the oldest race on Azeroth, with a history going back 16,000 years, and cultures which predate most any other in the world. This history doesn't strike me as something that every troll would know about however, as they seem to be much more of the type to live in the present rather than dwell on the past; I imagine many trolls would be surprised to hear about how their race once fought off an unstoppable onslaught of hideous giant insects, and may have even been the progenitors of the night elves. If your troll deems himself a scholar, however, by all means dig up the rich history and see what you discover.One thing has never changed about trollish history: warfare. Perhaps bolstered by their ability to recover from any injury short of death, the trolls remain the most savage and bloodthirsty of all the Azerothian races. Their entire history leads from one war to another, almost unceasingly -- whether they were fighting insects, or elves, humans or even one another, the trolls have always been fighting something, and much of their religious superstitions are built up around the prosecution of killing, and protection from the spirits of the dead.
"I got a shrunken head -- I just came out of the pool!"
As a member of the Darkspear tribe, you would have enjoyed uncharacteristic (as far as trolls are concerned) peace growing up under the leadership of the wise and spiritual Sen'jin. Having been driven away from your ancestral home in the jungles of Stranglethorn Vale centuries earlier by the other bullying troll tribes, the Darkspears gradually bore all the shame of defeat and exile and made a home for themselves on a rain-swept island in the middle of the ocean. Eventually, however, some humans from Kul Tiras showed up and made a settlement there as well, and your murloc neighbors started showing more and more signs of violence. Your leader began to worry about the future of the Darkspears until, a few years prior to the current setting of World of Warcraft, he received a vision of an orcish seer who would save his people and take them off the island.
Sure enough, Thrall and his orcs sailed on by just as the conflict with the murlocs was about to reach its climax. His ships were ravaged by the Maelstrom, and he needed time and assistance in repairing them. Together, the orcs and the trolls drove the humans away from the island, only to be captured by the murlocs soon after. Sen'jin was unfortunately sacrificed to the Sea Witch that had been inciting the murlocs to violence, but just before the troll leader died, Thrall managed to escape and hear Sen'jin's dying words: a plea to save his people and take them from this island.
Your troll character might have gone with Thrall to fight in the Third War alongside the orcs, or she might have stayed behind to weather the wrath of the Sea Witch with Sen'jin's son Vol'jin as the new leader, until a year later, when the whole tribe could finally make the move over to Durotar, where the orcs had founded their new nation. Vol'jin and the Darkspears set themselves up on the Echo Isles in the southeast of Durotar just before another wave of humans showed up under General Proudmoore showed up and started causing all kinds of new problems for the new Horde. Along with the hero Rexxar, the tauren and some ogres, they helped the orcs fight off the humans.
But once again, the victory was short-lived. One of the Darkspears' witch-doctors, named Zalazane, started mind-controlling people and taking over the Isles for himself! Vol'jin retreated to the mainland and founded Sen'jin Village as an outpost from which to fight back against the traitor and his mind-slaves.
"I got all this, and personality too!"
In spite of their culture having been based on a twisted misunderstanding of voodoo and primal societies, and notwithstanding some troll's apparent reluctance to give up the bloodthirsty, cannibalistic, head-shrinking ways of the past, there's something about the trolls that appeals to a lot of people. Something about them strikes you as care-free in the face of constant difficulty, strangely cheery, even when talking about serious topics like their tribe's close brush with extermination, or the return of the ancient Blood God, Hakkar.
Whether your character is a truly enlightened member of the new Horde, or an utterly cruel savage underneath that jovial attitude, he or she faces the same challenge as all the other races in World of Warcraft: to adapt and grow in the face of great changes in the new world. There's something about the troll that proclaims how they'll grow and change in their own unique way.
For further reading about trolls, check out the massive Troll Compendium from Blizzard's official lore site, or, if you prefer, WoWWiki's page on the same topic. Be sure to read up on trollish voodoo for a clear sense of where your tribe is coming from culturally, even if your character is only marginally interested in faith and religion, and especially if you want to be a priest, shaman or some other sort of spiritual leader. Also have a look at the simplified Dramatis-Personae page for more suggestions on creating a troll (but be aware that Dramatis-Personae seems to have missed the part of the story that has the Darkspear trolls living on an island for the last few centuries, rather than in Stranglethorn Vale -- other than that, their take on trolls as essentially evil is certainly a valid option).
Filed under: Horde, Trolls, Lore, Guides, RP, All the World's a Stage (Roleplaying)
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 3)
David Bowers Sep 1st 2008 1:15AM
I didn't find a lot of references to shamanism while reading about trollish history. It seemed that voodoo, witch doctors, and shadow hunters were much more important to trollish culture and warfare. Still, in other places I've read that the trolls did in fact have shamans also -- perhaps they were just fewer in number? Perhaps they blended elements of shamanism (such as totems) in with their voodoo and witch doctoring?
Since joining the Horde, the Darkspears have officially left voodoo behind and practice shamanism in its place, I believe. But voodoo still remains an important aspect of their heritage, and I'm sure there are many Darkspears who practice it in secret.
Imdala Sep 1st 2008 12:16PM
I've been wondering about this too, since I have a troll shaman who still practices voodoo, and I'm not sure how much of that she'd have to hide (or whether it's relatively accepted). WoWWiki has some conflicting information, although I've never heard it said outright that they gave up voodoo entirely, just the parts of it that would disturb their allies (going from cannibalism to disrupt the souls of their enemies to equally bizarre but less "ewwww"-factor methods).
Vol'jin, at the very least, would have to be an open practitioner. He's a shadow hunter, and if I'm remembering correctly, they're almost to the loa as paladins are to the Light. Going through quests, there's actually a few trolls who openly practice non-malicious voodoo.
As was mentioned above, since shaman have a few spells that originally belonged to shadow hunters (including the upcoming Hex, I believe), I've sort of come to the conclusion that as the trolls were taught the orcish version of shamanism, they probably influenced the orcs with their traditions, and the tauren mixed in theirs and picked up everyone else's, and we have the class we know today. In which case a troll witch doctor would probably still fall under the designation of "shaman" to most of the Horde--if it quacks like a duck, ect. In the same way Draenei shaman haven't really separated from the Light as far as I've heard, I imagine troll shaman would be as likely to still worship the loa. But as I said, I've found a lot of contradictory information.
ILikePVPbuthatePvPers Sep 1st 2008 2:28PM
@David Bowers
The Darkspear didn't completely abandoned Voodoo and Loa worship, they just abandoned the darker practices of their religion like cannibalism and ritual sacrifices.
That's why the still have the Priest class. They still have Voodoo as their religion.
David Bowers Sep 1st 2008 7:54PM
I think Imdala is probably right on. We have very distinct classes in the game, but as far as actual beliefs and religions are concerned there's a lot of overlapping. A roleplayer could probably get away with being a voodoo priest as well as a voodoo shaman. Either one could call themselves a witch doctor, I suppose.
I was mostly thinking that they left Voodoo behind because the NPCs often say, in game, "stay away from the voodoo." Perhaps they just mean the evil aspects of voodoo and not the elements of their actual religion.
Snuzzle Aug 31st 2008 6:26PM
Oh wow, you actually did trolls next. Thank you thank you thank you! :D
David Bowers Sep 1st 2008 12:02AM
As you wish! I hope it helps.
Namus Aug 31st 2008 6:27PM
Great column as usual! But I have a question: Since the darkspear trolls are recent members of the Horde, then what happened to the Forest Trolls that joined Doomhammer and the horde in the second war? did they leave it and went back to STV or what did they do on those Lordamere years for the orcs?
koltzu Aug 31st 2008 6:49PM
draenei and Romanians? I think that draenei resemble turks, their dance is matched to a turkish song.. so.. what?
Levica Aug 31st 2008 7:27PM
Tunak Tunak Tun is an Indian song. And the dance is mostly made up by Daler Mehndi.
Entertaining none the less though.
Roxton Sep 1st 2008 5:12AM
Loving the disclaimers (presumably in case one of the small voodo children pick this article up via the ether, as internet is kind of hard to get in the depths of the Congo, but hey).
Apart from that, nice article. I'm really enjoying this series - which will it be next week???
David Bowers Sep 1st 2008 7:59PM
Thanks!
Let's see... next week's article... I think I should keep it a secret actually. I mean, I could tell you, but then I'd have to bonk you on the head with a barrel of ale while cursing in a bad Scottish accent.
Meira Aug 31st 2008 7:18PM
And I was so sure that Draeneis sounded like indians, it all fits: their accent is more oriental rather than slavic, Tunak Tunak Tun, the Draenei Male dance, is from Daler Mehndi, an Indian artist, and the freaking racial mount is a damn elephant!!!
But if you call them romanians, it's your bet.
Jewbanks Aug 31st 2008 8:01PM
They dont sound Indian to me...
But i agree with you on the other details
lecada Aug 31st 2008 7:21PM
i went to romania this summer, and draenei do not sound like romanians. don't know where that one came from.
David Bowers Sep 1st 2008 12:08AM
Okay, I went and found a website with Russian and Romanian accents on it. Maybe I don't have an ear for it, but I can't tell yet which one sounds more like the draenei. Anyone care to listen and suggest something?
http://web.ku.edu/idea/europe/romania/romania.htm
In the meantime, I'm changing "Romanian" in my article to "Eastern European." I think we can agree on that much at least.
Discograndpa Aug 31st 2008 7:28PM
Title made me lol.
I'm a shallow, terrible person.
Anonymous Aug 31st 2008 7:32PM
"dwarves and the Scotts"
You mean "Scot's", as in from Scotland right? And not Scott as in the name?
ILikePvPbuthatePvPers Aug 31st 2008 7:53PM
Why didn't you mention the Zandalar tribe? The first tribe and progenitor of all the troll tribes.
They're also not bloodthirsty savages. They're the first tribe to renounce cannibalism (on their own accord not because of the new Horde's law). They're scholars that keep records of all troll history.
David Bowers Aug 31st 2008 11:58PM
I would have liked to talk about the Zandalar tribe, but it didn't seem essential for a new troll character to know about them, and I was trying to keep this article to essentials. Its rather difficult to keep these relatively short, you know.
wizeguy Aug 31st 2008 9:45PM
So... The new Horde forces trolls to give up cannibalism... but the forsaken are allowed to keep doing it? I'd prefer if the trolls had it instead... since I always seem to get killed by bloody undead rogues, then at least they couldn't cannibalize me. Come to think of it, then they'd just t-bag me instead because forsaken suck.