Back to the Horde

Six months ago I wrote this post, detailing why I prefered the Alliance to the Horde.
Now I'm here writing about how I've gone back to the Horde.
While I do still find the lore of certain Horde races perplexing and confusing, and I do still maintain that much of the Horde/Alliance hostility is due to the legacy of the Old Horde that the New Horde simply hasn't dealt with (Varian Wrynn being a standout example of a guy who hates the New Horde almost entirely because of things the Old Horde did, like burn his city and kill his father) I also can't deny that given the opportunity to go back, I took it with very little hesitation. A solid 50% of that is the excellent folks I know who play Horde side, but the other 50% is the inherent coolness factor of the Horde. And I'm not just talking about blood and glory histrionics here, either.
Although yeah, that's fun too. But for me, it's the constant struggle to make the future out of the horror of the past that defines what I admire and enjoy about playing Horde.
Now I'm here writing about how I've gone back to the Horde.
While I do still find the lore of certain Horde races perplexing and confusing, and I do still maintain that much of the Horde/Alliance hostility is due to the legacy of the Old Horde that the New Horde simply hasn't dealt with (Varian Wrynn being a standout example of a guy who hates the New Horde almost entirely because of things the Old Horde did, like burn his city and kill his father) I also can't deny that given the opportunity to go back, I took it with very little hesitation. A solid 50% of that is the excellent folks I know who play Horde side, but the other 50% is the inherent coolness factor of the Horde. And I'm not just talking about blood and glory histrionics here, either.
Although yeah, that's fun too. But for me, it's the constant struggle to make the future out of the horror of the past that defines what I admire and enjoy about playing Horde.
One of the things I find interesting and fun about World of Warcraft is to play armchair historian for the fictional setting. (Yeah, I know I'm weird.) I do this with pretty much any book, movie or game story I find myself interacting with, and in the case of the Horde the twin pillars of the post-Thrall era of the Horde seem to be a reconciliation with the past and the forging of the future. Each race within the Horde goes about this a different way, of course.
It's no secret that the Tauren are my favorite race in the game, hands down. I'm a large man, and I enjoy playing a large character in the game, but more than that I really enjoy the tauren as a people. Not only are they one of the most spiritually contemplative races in the game (the only race to have both shamans and druids as player options) but they've held on to a relatively calm mindset for generations even in the face of constant attacks from centaur trying to drive them out of their ancestral lands. In recent years, the tauren have abandoned their nomadic ways for the most part and settled in Thunder Bluff, a city built with some fairly impressive mechanical achievements that shows there is more to the tauren than nature worship and ancestor reverence. There's also a dark side to the tauren, as shown by the Grimtotem tribe. Basically, these guys (to me at least) are the heart of the New Horde, aware of the past but looking forward, and their influence on the orcs and trolls has been a good one. If they have a serious flaw in the new Horde, it's that they're often willing to just go along with what others are doing without really making sure it's a good idea. They're less active and driven than orcs or trolls, far less vengeful than undead or blood elves. I love Cairne Bloodhoof to death, but the tauren need an active heroic presence and Cairne seems to be getting ready to step down.
Still, for all that the tauren are my faves and can be argued for the heart of the Horde, the will of the Horde is the orcs. The very Horde concept comes from the time of the Burning Legion's manipulation and enslavement of the orcs on Draenor, and the fact that the orcs continue to organize in this fashion and are still led by a Warchief indicates both that they have not forgotten what happened and that what happened has forever changed them. Right now the orcish internal struggle seems broken up into three basic elements, each represented by a major lore figure. The warrior spirit of the Horde that seeks battle is personified by Garrosh Hellscream, who leads the Horde expedition in Northrend. The orcish desire to reclaim its past clean of Burning Legion corruption is, of course, represented by Thrall. And High Overlord Saurfang stands as a symbol for those orcs resolute in the face of their own awareness of what terrible atrocities have been committed in the Horde's name to ensure that this new future does not repeat the mistakes of the past. In WoTLK Saurfang has gone from a generic badass with a litany of quotes on the forums to a deeply realized, conflicted badass. (If you've seen him in action in Borean Tundra, you know, Saurfang will forever be Saurfang.) In a lot of ways the work done on expanding the Horde storyline in Wrath is another reason for my return to playing the faction, you simply can't deny yourself the pleasure of the Wrathgate storyline from the Horde perspective.
The Undead as a group have some of the most horrible quests I've undergone and I'm not going to back down from saying any group that casually poisons nominal allies to death just to see what happens is not a group I enjoy being associated with. That said, I will give them credit for an unrelenting will to exist and having united under the charismatic figure of Lady Sylvanas in record time. The fact that they've managed to organize into an actual nation in the ruins of Lordaeron is evidence to anyone that no, they're not the mindless horrors the Scourge often is. I don't think this would necessarily be of comfort to the living humans of Azeroth, however: just because that horrible walking corpse remembers you, it doesn't follow that he's any less dangerous. Still, the Wrathgate questline gets one of the worst vipers out of the Forsaken's nest, and assuming Sylvanas can move past the self-recrimination of having actually trusted someone that untrustworthy, the Forsaken have a real shot at revenge at Arthas through their association with the Horde, and Sylvanas has the chance for an actual alliance of equals with Thrall now that the two have fought side by side. The undead are also the ones who brought the Blood Elves into the Horde, and as a result the Horde basically owns almost all of the northern Eastern Kingdoms, everything not under Scourge control anyway. The Forsaken are suddenly in a real position of power, and yet paradoxically are the most vulnerable they've ever been.
Blood Elves are always going to annoy me. I'm sorry, but I don't really think the whole Sunwell deal makes up for everything - even if he let you do it, you still kidnapped, tortured and drained the magic out of an ancient being of pure light and as a people have come off as total facists as well as mana junkies. Seriously, you can see priests teleport into protests and mind control the crowds to agree that everything's hunky dory if you hang around long enough in Silvermoon. Ironically, however, it seems like the Blood Elven presence in the Horde has actually mellowed the undead out some, perhaps by affecting Sylvanas (although she tries to play it down, the quest Journey to Undercity clearly affects her deeply) while their ruthlessness and aptitude for magic strengthens the Horde in the face of increased Alliance hostility and the Lich King's most recent attacks. I find myself taking my new Horde-side DK to Silvermoon for no real reason at all, just to see the place from time to time, and I have to admit that its design and layout was probably the single best and most accessible work in all of the previous expansion. I have to admit that the Blood Elves have provided necessary dramatic tension as well, shaking up the status quo of the Horde and allowing for new storylines and quests that wouldn't have been possible before.
I admit that I don't play Horde because I like troll lore. I do in fact like troll lore, however. I enjoy the various Troll dungeons and raids, although I do think we may have a few too many of them (off the top of my head we have Zul'Ferrak, Sunken Temple, and Zul'Gurub in original WoW, Zul'Aman in BC, and Drak'Tharon Keep and Gundrak in Wrath) and I think what we need more is troll lore that doesn't involve just killing them, While Zul'Drak delivers troll lore, it's a group of trolls that you have to yet again hunt down and kill. Having just killed Zul'jin in the last expansion, I'd like to see more questlines involving the trolls, possibly even going so far as to clear the Echo Isles and get rid of Zalazane.
Essentially, what I like the most about the Horde and the reason I continue to come back to play it is the note of redemption that seems inherent to the faction. In some ways, having never tasted final defeat in the way the races of the Horde have, the Alliance tends to come off as arrogant and quick to jump to conclusions regarding the Horde. Now, some of this is fair... Night Elves have every right to resent Orc encroachment in their forests and the murder of Cenarius, It's going to take a long time for humans to get over the burning of Stormwind... but it's easy to forget that the Trolls had an empire across the Eastern Kingdoms well before humans or High Elves decided to take it, and if Blood Elves and Trolls can work together after centuries of hostility (even if the Darkspears are hardly the Amani) then that alone makes the Horde seem that much stronger. The Horde is several peoples who have been through great hardship coming together to make a stand, and right now I'm enjoying seeing how it all plays out in Northrend. The Taunka's addition to the Horde is yet another example of this philosophy, as they were being hard pressed by Scourge Nerubians until the Horde brought them into the fold.
So now it's your turn: if you play Horde, why? If not, why not? What do you like about the faction, or hate about it?
Filed under: Horde, Lore, The Burning Crusade, Blood Elves, Odds and ends, Analysis / Opinion, Trolls, Undead, Tauren, Orcs, Wrath of the Lich King






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 10)
Pyornthe Feb 1st 2009 12:03PM
That screenshot is pretty much all the reason you need to roll horde. :P
Kassu Feb 1st 2009 2:27PM
The Hellreaver looked just as cool on my human DK.
Horde cities are confusing as hell to navigate.
Mr42 Feb 1st 2009 3:21PM
well, i actually get lost in stormwind everytime :)
ontopic: i play horde because of my tauren shaman and I share matt's admiration of tauren as a great, ancient, spiritual people + thrall's sheer awesomeness
Janoi Feb 2nd 2009 11:13AM
I play horde just for the looks... Undead, orcs and tauren rules...Orc, are ok...Blood elf.. naa they dance like (......) and one more thing... Sylvana is hot...
aliance luck ugly, i use to have 2 allys gnome and human... I really did not like them, i just delete them.
the lore, well they both have them and are amazing...
HORDE FTW..
frzamonkey Feb 1st 2009 12:15PM
do we know why the servers are down?
Eisengel Feb 1st 2009 3:16PM
... because there are so many off-topic posts
Linden Feb 1st 2009 12:19PM
I started as horde and think character wise, they're a far superior race - i like playing evil but the xenophobic shallow fascists of the alliance really annoy me.
That being said the plot and nature of the alliance makes it more enjoyable to play. The horde side always felt very 2D while the alliance cities actually seem to be alive.
not that the horde don't have their nut jobs... they're just more marginalized (i actually like to think of the horde as the more human of the two....)
May go back to my lvl 62 troll at some point...
Xretsim Feb 1st 2009 12:20PM
One of the big reasons that i don't play horde is because their cities are confusing, one day when we raided Undercity half the group went to Sylvanas and the other went the other way... complete failure
jay2wice Feb 1st 2009 1:08PM
That just means you roll Alliance most of the time ...
Ensane Feb 1st 2009 4:42PM
you the same is true for the horde. I was in a capital raid and when we got to the draenei city, the place seems complex and confusing. Its not because it actually is, its because i have never been in the city on an alliance character before and because you have almost a hundred guards chasing after you at once. The city sort of gets lost in the mess during a capital raid.
Suzaku Feb 2nd 2009 4:31AM
There could not be an easier city to navigate than the Undercity. It is nothing but a circle. If you run around in a circle long enough, you will find what you are looking for. If you know where what you're looking for is, it takes a fraction of a second because everything radiates out from the entrance, which is in the center of the town.
Orgrimmar and Silvermoon are also laid out in roughly circular formations, though they each have side sections.
The only reason you found it confusing is because you had never been there before on a Horde character.
Ikarus Feb 2nd 2009 1:03PM
I play horde, but UC confused the hell out of me when I first got there. OF course now I navigate without even thinking
Knob Feb 1st 2009 12:24PM
I play a Tauren hunter for the exact same reasons you mentioned. They are the calm, spiritual side of the Horde but they're not afraid to use their considerable strength and will to do what is necessary should the situation demand it.
To take a snippet out of the Rise of the Horde novel:
"I thought about the taurens' request for aid in fighting their enemy, the vile, filthy centaur.
"Yes...I feel for them. It will be good to be able to help them," I said.
Drek'thar laughed, turning his blind eyes to me and seeing me more clearly than anyone with sight could.
"Oh, my young Thrall," he said, chuckling still, "you do not yet understand. They will help us."
Decrusher Feb 1st 2009 11:25PM
@ Ensane. Its just not that you've never been to Exodar. I play alliance, and i have no clew how to get arround in their. I personnally think it is the worst layed out city in-game.
Esoteroth Feb 1st 2009 12:25PM
I play Alliance, but I give my Allegiance falls with Theramore not Stormwind so I will quite often go out of my way to avoid quests that( from an Rp point of veiw) violate Thrall's pact with Jainia....
Varian is a fool,
Bolvar was my king
Eternauta Feb 1st 2009 1:55PM
Amen!
uncaringbear Feb 1st 2009 4:26PM
Varian needs a punch to the head, seriously.
Esoteroth Feb 1st 2009 12:26PM
, but my allegiance falls with theramore" i ment
Cink Feb 1st 2009 12:33PM
Why don't I play the Horde? Sheesh, there are a myriad of answers that I could give to that...I'll even admit that most of them are half joking and involve how the skin from one Tauren can provide enough clothing for a small family of Gnomes!
But I would have to say the TRUE reason I don't play the Horde is that for all the power and unity they portrey in the game, it is really little more than a facade. Now, I wouldn't know the entire story, as I can admit that the entirety of my personal knowledge comes from a level 39 Troll Priest that I can hardly muster up the drive to touch...but from what I have seen the Horde looks like it is on the brink of a civil war at the moment. With the arrival of Garrosh Hellscream, the out and out betrayal of Putress, and the obvious xenophobia of the Grimtotem tribe (who has been promised Aid from the Lich King, yes? Are we going to have to lay the smack down on Magatha or whatever her name is in Icecrown?) the Horde looks like it's actually in a VERY tentative position...at best.
However if you look at the Alliance, they're finally mobilizing, finally having at least two of the races that have been a serious funk are being mobilized.
The Humans have finally rooted out what is largely the most impressive source of corruption in their kingdom (I don't think I need to mention who that is) and had their rightful king returned to them. Also, I'm even willing to put myself out there as a Varian fanboy to say, HE KICKS ASS! This is no yellow backed coward willing to cow-tow to whatever the Horde wants to do...he is more than willing to take up the reigns of the Alliance as a whole and tell the Horde when and where it's time to get off the easy train.
The Dwarves, while they've always been more than willing to get up and aid the Alliance, if you follow their quests in the Stormpeaks and other places, you'll find that due to the time they spent traveling to Northrend has re-energized them in a way no-one expected. I don't want to put out spoilers, but let's just say that one of the biggest worries that has been consuming our good King Magni has just been lifted from his shoulders. And no, his daughter didn't have an abortion :P.
The Alliance is re-building and getting ready to rise to glory once more, and the Horde's sun is getting ready to set...I don't think they have very much going on for them I'm afraid.
Vendrill Feb 1st 2009 1:35PM
Well said! I've played both horde and Alliance. While I find many things about the horde interesting, I personally prefer the Alliance, both culturally and lore wise.
I do like how blizzard shows both positive and negative sides to each faction's leaders.