All the World's a Stage: So you want to be a blood elf
This installment of All the World's a Stage is the tenth 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.One look at the blood elves and you might think "arrogant pop star," but their story entails much more suffering and tragedy than is at first evident. Like so many in the World of Warcraft, they have very nearly lost everything that was important to them, and more than once their entire way of life has been upset, turned around, and set in an entirely new direction. They are at once brilliant and desperate, beautiful and woefully flawed, addicted to evil magic and yet not yet beyond hope of redemption.
The blood elves are the descendants of the original "Highborne" of the night elves 10,000 years before the setting of World of Warcraft, who used to follow Queen Azshara and studied the arcane magical energies flowing through the Well of Eternity. Following the "War of the Ancients," (discussed in the article on night elves), most of their peers at the time observed that arcane energies tended to attract evil demons from the darkest dimensions in the universe, and thought the world would be better off without it. The Highborne who survived that war had gotten very used to the power of arcane magic coursing through their bodies, however, and they suffered from serious magical withdrawal when those energies were no longer available to them. From their point of view, it was cowardly not to try again, to simply conceal themselves from the demons rather than to give up arcane magic entirely. Their addiction and powerlessness made them desperate enough to turn to violence, though they were no match for the new rulers of the night elf people.
A new civilization
These rulers knew that the Highborne could not be allowed to continue influencing and harming their community in this way, but also didn't want to simply put their kindred to death. They decided to banish the Highborne and their leader, Dath'Remar Sunstrider from their new homeland in the forests of Kalimdor. To the night elves, Dath'Remar was a dangerous terrorist rebel, but to the Highborne, he was a great leader, and the founder of their new civilization. He led them across the sea, past the wild Maelstrom, to the northern lands of the Eastern Kingdoms. There, they encountered the humans and had peaceable relations with them, but they had to fight tooth and nail with the Amani forest trolls for every inch of the land they wished to occupy. Finally, they eventually established the kingdom of Quel'Thalas, and created a new fountain of magical energy called the Sunwell, using a vial from the original Well of Eternity that had been destroyed in the great war.
This time, however, they had some warning of the dangers involved in this use of arcane magic, and they attempted to use it responsibly. They placed monolithic Runestones on the borders of their kingdom in order to shield their use of these energies from the extra-dimensional demons. Over time, the energies of the Sunwell became an integral part of their identity, their culture, and even their own biology.
(Although their elven name, "quel'dorei," literally meant "Children of Noble Birth," they came to be known in these Eastern lands as the "high elves.")
These magical energies transformed the high elves into something quite different from their kindred in the far West. Without the World Tree, Nordrassil to bring them immortality and total harmony with nature, their stature shortened, and their complexion turned paler, and their eyes began to shine sky-blue rather than yellow or moon-blue. These changes seemed fitting, however, as they had already started to think of themselves as people of the sun rather than the night, and had completely separated themselves from their old identity.
Over thousands of years, they forgot much of their ancient history among the night elves. They became increasingly intertwined with the humans and dwarves in an Alliance against the trolls, and even against the orcs who make their way through the Dark Portal and up into Lordaeron.
A new catastrophe
Your blood elf character would have started life thinking of himself as a "high elf," a member of this peaceful civilization which did not worship nature, but certainly lived in harmony with it. You would have thought of humans and dwarves as allies in your struggles against the trolls and orcs. From the time of maturity around the age of 60, or even until old age around 350 years old, it would seem to any normal blood elf that things could continue as they always had. But the arrival of the Scourge, just 5 years before the current setting, changed everything -- ending the centuries of relative peace and prosperity that the high elves enjoyed.Arthas and his legion of undead marched through Quel'Thalas, destroying the protective Runestones, and leaving a strip of lifeless wasteland in their wake. Arthas murdered their Ranger-General, Sylvanas Windrunner, massacred about 90% of the population, and in the end, defiled the Sunwell itself by using it to resurrect the evil necromancer Kel'Thuzad.
Kael'thas Sunstrider, descendent of Dath'remar Sunstrider, was out of town at the time of the Scourge invasion, but he came back to try and salvage his kingdom as best he could. He found scattered survivors hiding here and there, all weak and ill, with torn spirits and withered hopes. To them he seemed like a savior, the only one with wisdom and vision to lead them out of their despair. In honor of the fallen, he suggested his people adopt a new name, "blood elves," so that this tragedy may never be forgotten.
Kael'thas was forced to destroy the corrupted Sunwell in order to purge the blood elves of the undead taint now corrupting it (without knowing at the time that some of its energies had been preserved). Now that this energy was lost, however, he and his people had to look to new sources of power to feed their addiction to magic. The Alliance, however, completely failed to understand the true nature of the blood elve's plight. Grand Marshal Garithos, who had appointed himself leader of the Alliance forces remaining in Lordaeron after the Scourge had come through and destroyed nearly everything, believed that humans were superior to all the other races, and wished the elves and dwarves had never been allowed to join the Alliance. He gave the blood elves orders which were at first menial and then simply impossible to achieve. Garithos set them to defend themselves against an army of the undead, and then abandoned them at the last moment, withdrawing all the human forces into a different battle. Kael'thas and his regiment were forced to accept the assistance of the snake-like naga in order to avoid certain destruction. Garithos became enraged that the blood elves had accepted the help of their long-time enemies, despite the fact that he had left them with no other option, and so all relations between the blood elves and the Alliance broke down completely. Lady Vashj, leader of the naga, brought them to Illidan Stormrage in Outland, who taught them how to use demonic energies in order to meet their urgent need for magical energies.
A new hope
Nonetheless, to the blood elves remaining in Azeroth, it seemed like a new day was dawning. Kael'thas seemed every bit the great hero his ancestor Dath'remar had been (or seemed to be), and few suspected that even greater dangers lay in wait for them. Many of the most capable of the blood elves went with Kael'thas to Outland, while the remainder stayed behind to rebuild as much of Quel'thalas as they could. These blood elves still in Azeroth looked forward to the day that they could rejoin their leader in Outland, but in the meantime forged ties with their former friends among the Forsaken of Sylvanas Windrunner, and by extension, with her associates in the Horde. It seemed a temporary alliance of convenience at the time, but in truth it was the last refuge of their teetering culture, about to withstand yet another psychological blow, when their king and hero would become their enemy.
This brings us to everything your character would have known at the outset of the Burning Crusade, when blood elves were first introduced into World of Warcraft. More than any other race in the game, however, the story and conditions of the blood elves has changed a great deal since the Burning Crusade was first released. Next week, we will have a look at these developments and see how the blood elves stand as the attention turns toward Northrend, and their ultimate confrontation with their greatest nemesis: Arthas.
For more information about the blood elves, feel free to check out WoWWiki's information about them, but beware that reading it feels a bit disjointed, since the story of the blood elves actually branches off from the stories of both the night elves and the high elves, both of which have retained their identity as separate groups (although blood elves now far outnumber the remaining high elves who rejected the changes that Kael'thas brought and remained loyal to the Alliance). Dramatis-Personae, as usual, has a good basic introduction to blood elves. Together with this article, these should give you everything you need to get started roleplaying as a low-level blood elf, but as you level up your character will need to learn more and more about the changing state of their race...
...to be continued.
[Edit: I have updated the "new catastrophe" section to reflect my deeper understanding about how the blood elves were betrayed by, and ultimately came to sever ties with the Alliance. Thanks to all the commenters for pointing me in the right direction!]
Filed under: Horde, Blood Elves, Lore, Guides, RP, All the World's a Stage (Roleplaying)






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
elprogramer Oct 27th 2008 12:27AM
It's never been hinted that they forgot any of their history. When Kael'thas meets Tyrande in WC3:TFT, neither of them miss a beat, indicating that the two nations knew of each other, if not kept in touch outright.
And before anyone says "they hate each other", it would be entirely consistent if the elves still like their own kind more than the "lesser races".
Wasuremono Oct 27th 2008 1:07AM
I don't think he meant they liteally "forgot" their history like amnesia but that it just wasn't important to them. It's kind of like australians, the japanese, or even many citizens of the u.s. We came from other places but the place we came from isn't really important anymore and some of us don't even know about the places we came from.
David Bowers Oct 27th 2008 2:37PM
Yes, Wasuremono, that's exactly what I meant. Thanks!
Aerei Oct 27th 2008 12:49AM
I just have to point out that the Scourge invasion was five yours before VANILLA WoW, was 6 years before BC and, with Wrath looming nigh, is now about 7 years ago according to lore.
Otherwise, great work. :)
David Bowers Oct 27th 2008 2:44PM
Oh okay. I'll have to go back and edit other articles if that is accurate. I'll do some research on it and see. Thanks!
Wasuremono Oct 27th 2008 1:05AM
YAY! Finally the blood elf article! It was a pretty good read but it has a to be continued at the end!
Illione Oct 27th 2008 1:40AM
You also forgot to mention how the humans treated the blood elves after the destruction of Silvermoon but before meeting the nagas.
I seem to remember Kael having direct contact with Garithos before meeting Vashj and hewas treating the elven refugees as cannon fodder basically. Ties were already being broken before the blood elves even got near demonic magic.
ArchLobster Oct 27th 2008 10:52AM
Yeah, the Wiki articles all mostly paint the blood elves like some neo-nazi racists, who hate everybody and are all crazy. Most of these quotes come from the WC RPG books and those mostly refer to Kael's blood elves.
Is there someone that's going to edit some of that? The blood elf articles make the blood elves all look like angry, shallow, emo teens.
David Bowers Oct 27th 2008 2:48PM
Yeah I left that out because it seemed more like one man's prejudice against the blood elves wouldn't necessarily be characteristic of human and blood elf relations as a whole. It's definitely a huge issue that Kael'thas and his soldiers came up against, but for the population of blood elves as a whole I felt like the fel-energy issue was the more important one.
Besides, I don't want to represent the blood elves as all bad nazi type people. They definitely have their flaws, but that's largely what makes them interesting. Their redemption (which we'll talk about next week) is one of the most compelling stories in Warcraft so far.
Illione Oct 27th 2008 4:03PM
I believe it's important enough to be included. While Garithos' view may not be the official view of the Alliance. Garithos is a high ranking official and he was the one in DIRECT contact with the Blood Elf leader.
Honestly the Alliance is at the very least to blame for their negligence to the situation that Garithos was creating, they should have sent a more diplomatic official for direct relations with Kael. Had there been a less prejudice representative of the Alliance there instead of Garithos we might be seeing a completely different Blood Elf standing.
Danel Oct 27th 2008 10:42PM
Hell, if there'd been a more diplomatic figure than Garithos there things might have turned out drastically different with the Scourge as well. If the response to their aid had been "Thank you, I shall tell all our people that you are not like the Scourge but a decent people capable of reason."... who knows?
Necromancer Oct 27th 2008 1:55AM
@Wasuremono
(I don't think he meant they liteally "forgot" their history like amnesia but that it just wasn't important to them. It's kind of like australians, the japanese, or even many citizens of the u.s. We came from other places but the place we came from isn't really important anymore and some of us don't even know about the places we came from.)
Translation:
Me read good and know lots bout stuff. Me no lots on world things and tell dem all how it dis! I no I was best in my histree shcool cuz I tell u how croc dundeerz and japz r! Me so smart cuz movys are reel!
greyistar Oct 27th 2008 4:18AM
The Blood Elves have one of the very best stories in Warcraft IMO. They like the Forsaken have lost so much of what they once had.
onetrueping Oct 27th 2008 2:53AM
Hey, look, another troll! Stick pokin' time!
onetrueping Oct 27th 2008 2:54AM
Holy crap, between the time that I loaded the comments, and when I got around to replying, he already went gray. Troll-busters of WoWInsider, unite!
Xino Oct 27th 2008 3:09AM
This guy's reply has got to be one of the dumbest things I have seen on wowinsider
Metal Geario 360 Oct 27th 2008 10:45AM
Whats sad is, you could've at least "attempted" to be funny!
That was just bad, flat out.
Angus Oct 27th 2008 8:21AM
" The Alliance could not help them, and so they were forced to accept the offer of their ancient enemies, the naga, to lead them to new power."
"All this angered the Alliance and drove a deep wedge between them, severing that tie completely."
Way to gloss over one of the most important parts of this and completely ruin the ACTUAL reason that Blood Elves are not Alliance.
Garithos treated the Prince of the High Elves like some worthless piece of trash. He was racist and hated the High Elves. So he sent an ally of the humans who had been helping them at all times and taught them magic into fights with the express purpose of having them get slaughtered to give the humans an advantage.
Kael'thas had no choice. The naga gave him and his people a chance to survive a suicide mission and he took it. Garithos branded him and his people a traitor for getting assistance and imprisoned them. Lady Vashj busted him out and he decided that he would not deal with a group of people that betrayed him and were not there for his people when his people needed them most.
The truth is that the Alliance treated them horribly and they left not because they could find new energies to stave off the horrible addiction corrupting them, but because even if the Alliance could help them, they wouldn't.
The wiki article you got most of this info has been edited with the important information taken off.
I suggest looking at this snippet to see what was taken off.
http://www.wowwiki.com/Warcraft_III:_The_Frozen_Throne#Alliance_Campaign:_Curse_of_the_Blood_Elves
The wiki article has been edited a lot by people trying to paint them into a much worse light than they deserve. The race was written to have a feeling of righteous anger. They were betrayed by people that they had always assisted and they are vengeful now.
A flawed race, no doubt, but ignoring the failures that led to their current situation is a disservice.
NekoAli Oct 27th 2008 8:40AM
Heh, Angus brought up the points I was going to bring up between the time I read the article and was reading the comments... It was the Alliance (or more specifically, a human leader) who betrayed the High Elves and drove a very deep wedge in between them.
And then the Scourge invaded with the human prince Arthas at their lead, laying waste to their homeland. Sure, Arthas was evil incarnate by that point and an enemy to every thing that lived, but I rather doubt that was exactly common knowledge by then. And I'm sure it sealed the deal as far as the break with the Alliance went.
Also, it's important to remember that the naga aren't some just random evil race the High Elves turned to for aid, but distant relations. Naga are mutated elves, the same as High/blood elves are (and dryads, satyr and who knows how many other races). Specifically, they are the remains of the highborne 'night' elves that once followed Queen Azshara and followed her into the depths of the ocean when the original Well of Eternity was destroyed. So they are actually fairly similar in story to the Blood Elves. Driven out of their home because of their fascination and study of arcane magic.
So it's not very much a surprise that Blood Elves are very suspicious, insular and a bit arrogant. Every ally, even members of their own faith, has at some point betrayed and either tried to kill them or drive them away. Even their own Prince now has gone mad and tried to destroy them in the name of 'saving' them. Yet the Blood Elf nation still stands.
Nana Oct 27th 2008 8:48AM
Truthiness? On -my- WoW Insider? Home of the 'Alliance goooood, Horde baaaaad' piece writers?
You're fighting an uphill battle there, dude, but I salute you.