All the World's a Stage: Possibilities for worgen and goblins
All the World's a Stage, and all the orcs and humans merely players. They have their stories and their characters; and one man in his time plays many roles.
Ever since word broke about the possibility of playing either a worgen or a goblin, I've been thinking a lot about how it would be to roleplay them. In terms of lore, each one fits in very nicely -- the goblins have the neutral city of Undermine not far from the great Maelstrom at the center of the world, and the worgen have lots of connections to other dimensions, possibly the Emerald Dream. Assuming the expansion is in fact going to be a combination of the Maelstrom and the Emerald Dream, each race could have a lot to do with why the Horde and the Alliance are eager to go and continue the adventure after Northrend.
Some others are talking about how and why these races would join either faction. The goblins seem a shoo-in for the Horde, since they've already got so many connections with one another above and beyond the ostensible neutrality the goblins maintain between the Horde and the Alliance. The worgen connection to the Alliance is a bit tougher to figure out, but there are two apparent possibilities: either the humans of Gilneas have become worgen and wish to rejoin their former brethren, or the original worgen from their own dimension somehow join up with the Alliance in order to fight off a shared enemy such as the Burning Legion or the "Nightmare" of the Emerald Dream.
Today we'll discuss both of these possibilities and stake my claim on which I think is more likely, and look at a number of the story hooks that worgen and goblins could create for roleplayers if and when we get the chance to play them.
On speculation
First let me say a word on why I think there will be new races in this expansion and why it will be goblins and worgen. First of all, the Maelstrom and Emerald Dream both seem like logical places to go next, and they both have connections with one another that could tie together well in an expansion story. You can read Lorecrafted for a more detailed speculation as to how the lore elements could fit together -- I doubt it will be exactly like any of us predict, but many of these same elements will likely be present in different ways.
Secondly, if you look at the new Halloween Masks of the goblins and the worgen (pictured above), you can see that they actually have new model textures in them. The goblins pictured there are not just the same goblin faces we see in the game today, but totally new ones with more detail and nuances. The same is true of the worgen -- you can see that they don't look like the ferocious worgen we see in the game now, but rather like noble warriors of some sort, much more dog-like than the savage wolf-men we see now. These are player-character quality textures, likely for entirely new goblin and worgen models which will be released with the new expansion. Besides, it just makes sense that after getting a new class in the last expansion, we'll get new races in this one (though admittedly I would prefer to get both!).
Then again, it's entirely possible that all this is just our own idle imaginations, and that the actual expansion will be entirely different! Looking forward to the future always has that problem. Sometimes you'll be right, and sometimes you'll be wrong.
Worgen
So how well do the worgen fit as a potential player race? Obviously there are many things we don't know about them, and many possibilities. We know for sure that the worgen we play will not be the same type of worgen we've been fighting all along. Some theorize that they could be former humans of Gilneas who have turned into worgen by some magic, but I think this is unlikely. My theory (which some others have thought of as well) is that they are creatures originally from the Emerald Dream itself, the majority of which have gone mad through their battle with the "Lords of the Emerald Flame" which I suspect has something to do with the Emerald Nightmare. A small remaining bastion, the one which will join the Alliance, still maintains the good fight, and desperately turns to others for help, much like the draenei did in the Burning Crusade.
This fits with the story of Velinde Starsong, the night elf who originally summoned the worgen to Azeroth for the first time, using a magical gift from Elune herself, the "Scythe of Elune." If, over time, the Nightmare corrupted the worgen, then they would indeed appear as they are in the game now: vicious and evil to the core. Perhaps at some point we will catch up to Velinde Starsong, and see what happened to her after she disappeared.
In any case, whatever the story behind the worgen may be, they could be the Alliance's first "tribal" culture, similar in some ways to the orcs, the tauren, or even the trolls. They're sure to be different, of course, perhaps more like the night elves, and possibly following the same religion as well. Together, the worgen and the night elves would provide a counter-balance to the current dominance of Light-based beliefs which the humans, dwarves and draenei follow.
Worgen would also be the Alliance's first beast-like race, in this way a sort of counterpart to the Horde's tauren, though in size and stature they would probably be more like the trolls. A roleplayer with a worgen character could explore themes about the beast within, about struggling to keep your sanity against forces which could easily turn you into a monster you abhor.
Goblins
The goblins have a city in the South Seas, very near to the Maelstrom. They are a much easier case, since they have been almost on the Horde's side for so long now. But it's important to remember that it definitely won't be so simple as just a group of goblins deciding to team up with their orcish buddies. The goblins that may end up joining the Horde will not just be regular goblins like all the others. They may be an outcast trading company of some sort, no longer part of the system created by the trade princes of Undermine. Whatever reason they may have for abandoning their formal neutrality, there's sure to be a story behind it, probably one which will draw us closer into the Maelstrom, the Emerald Dream, or both.
For roleplayers, goblins would give the Horde a more cutthroat counterpart to the gnomes, much as blood elves gave them a counterpart to night elves and humans. Many roleplayers have long enjoyed the inventive curiosity of the gnomes in their scientific experiments, and if goblins join on the Horde side, there will be even more madly scientific fun there as well.
In addition, if you ever wanted to play a nasty loan shark, a venture capitalist, or an economic mastermind of any sort, goblins are the race for you.
It will be interesting to see if these possibilities do play out. These two races certainly seem to make the most sense as far as the various possibilities go, but in the end anything is possible. Even if these two races are not chosen for the expansion, roleplayers would do well to think about the spirit both races represent -- perhaps we can explore their themes in other ways as well.
All the World's a Stage is your source for RP ideas, research, and future possibilities. Have a look back to past, present, and future of roleplaying, as well as our first look about how roleplaying a death knight was going to be different.
Ever since word broke about the possibility of playing either a worgen or a goblin, I've been thinking a lot about how it would be to roleplay them. In terms of lore, each one fits in very nicely -- the goblins have the neutral city of Undermine not far from the great Maelstrom at the center of the world, and the worgen have lots of connections to other dimensions, possibly the Emerald Dream. Assuming the expansion is in fact going to be a combination of the Maelstrom and the Emerald Dream, each race could have a lot to do with why the Horde and the Alliance are eager to go and continue the adventure after Northrend.
Some others are talking about how and why these races would join either faction. The goblins seem a shoo-in for the Horde, since they've already got so many connections with one another above and beyond the ostensible neutrality the goblins maintain between the Horde and the Alliance. The worgen connection to the Alliance is a bit tougher to figure out, but there are two apparent possibilities: either the humans of Gilneas have become worgen and wish to rejoin their former brethren, or the original worgen from their own dimension somehow join up with the Alliance in order to fight off a shared enemy such as the Burning Legion or the "Nightmare" of the Emerald Dream.
Today we'll discuss both of these possibilities and stake my claim on which I think is more likely, and look at a number of the story hooks that worgen and goblins could create for roleplayers if and when we get the chance to play them.
On speculation
First let me say a word on why I think there will be new races in this expansion and why it will be goblins and worgen. First of all, the Maelstrom and Emerald Dream both seem like logical places to go next, and they both have connections with one another that could tie together well in an expansion story. You can read Lorecrafted for a more detailed speculation as to how the lore elements could fit together -- I doubt it will be exactly like any of us predict, but many of these same elements will likely be present in different ways.
Secondly, if you look at the new Halloween Masks of the goblins and the worgen (pictured above), you can see that they actually have new model textures in them. The goblins pictured there are not just the same goblin faces we see in the game today, but totally new ones with more detail and nuances. The same is true of the worgen -- you can see that they don't look like the ferocious worgen we see in the game now, but rather like noble warriors of some sort, much more dog-like than the savage wolf-men we see now. These are player-character quality textures, likely for entirely new goblin and worgen models which will be released with the new expansion. Besides, it just makes sense that after getting a new class in the last expansion, we'll get new races in this one (though admittedly I would prefer to get both!).
Then again, it's entirely possible that all this is just our own idle imaginations, and that the actual expansion will be entirely different! Looking forward to the future always has that problem. Sometimes you'll be right, and sometimes you'll be wrong.
Worgen
So how well do the worgen fit as a potential player race? Obviously there are many things we don't know about them, and many possibilities. We know for sure that the worgen we play will not be the same type of worgen we've been fighting all along. Some theorize that they could be former humans of Gilneas who have turned into worgen by some magic, but I think this is unlikely. My theory (which some others have thought of as well) is that they are creatures originally from the Emerald Dream itself, the majority of which have gone mad through their battle with the "Lords of the Emerald Flame" which I suspect has something to do with the Emerald Nightmare. A small remaining bastion, the one which will join the Alliance, still maintains the good fight, and desperately turns to others for help, much like the draenei did in the Burning Crusade.
This fits with the story of Velinde Starsong, the night elf who originally summoned the worgen to Azeroth for the first time, using a magical gift from Elune herself, the "Scythe of Elune." If, over time, the Nightmare corrupted the worgen, then they would indeed appear as they are in the game now: vicious and evil to the core. Perhaps at some point we will catch up to Velinde Starsong, and see what happened to her after she disappeared.
In any case, whatever the story behind the worgen may be, they could be the Alliance's first "tribal" culture, similar in some ways to the orcs, the tauren, or even the trolls. They're sure to be different, of course, perhaps more like the night elves, and possibly following the same religion as well. Together, the worgen and the night elves would provide a counter-balance to the current dominance of Light-based beliefs which the humans, dwarves and draenei follow.
Worgen would also be the Alliance's first beast-like race, in this way a sort of counterpart to the Horde's tauren, though in size and stature they would probably be more like the trolls. A roleplayer with a worgen character could explore themes about the beast within, about struggling to keep your sanity against forces which could easily turn you into a monster you abhor.
Goblins
The goblins have a city in the South Seas, very near to the Maelstrom. They are a much easier case, since they have been almost on the Horde's side for so long now. But it's important to remember that it definitely won't be so simple as just a group of goblins deciding to team up with their orcish buddies. The goblins that may end up joining the Horde will not just be regular goblins like all the others. They may be an outcast trading company of some sort, no longer part of the system created by the trade princes of Undermine. Whatever reason they may have for abandoning their formal neutrality, there's sure to be a story behind it, probably one which will draw us closer into the Maelstrom, the Emerald Dream, or both.
For roleplayers, goblins would give the Horde a more cutthroat counterpart to the gnomes, much as blood elves gave them a counterpart to night elves and humans. Many roleplayers have long enjoyed the inventive curiosity of the gnomes in their scientific experiments, and if goblins join on the Horde side, there will be even more madly scientific fun there as well.
In addition, if you ever wanted to play a nasty loan shark, a venture capitalist, or an economic mastermind of any sort, goblins are the race for you.
It will be interesting to see if these possibilities do play out. These two races certainly seem to make the most sense as far as the various possibilities go, but in the end anything is possible. Even if these two races are not chosen for the expansion, roleplayers would do well to think about the spirit both races represent -- perhaps we can explore their themes in other ways as well.
Filed under: All the World's a Stage (Roleplaying), Horde, Alliance, Analysis / Opinion, Expansions, Lore, RP, Rumors, Cataclysm







Reader Comments (Page 1 of 6)
Sengir Jul 26th 2009 8:07PM
Wow, let's see how many wild-ass speculation articles we can have per day for the next year, year and a half.
Velleekwitay Jul 26th 2009 8:09PM
I agree. Speculation is a fool's game and needs to stop.
Jay Jul 26th 2009 8:16PM
No guys, these speculators have a point. Textures found in-game OBVIOUSLY point to the next races, its TOTALLY LOGICAL. Its obviously some sort of conspiracy.
>_>
I think some people are ignoring that goblins and worgen have a connection to Halloween more than the crazy stories they've made up. Shit during Halloween you could get transformed into a goblin.
Tyras Jul 27th 2009 8:43AM
I believe they keep doing speculation articles is because Summer is the worse time of year, so nothing new comes, so they try to continue something for as long as, just to keep people reading. I do like to read these, they're interesting, but I do agree, continuing them for so long get's tedious.
Alchemistmerlin Jul 26th 2009 8:52PM
Wow, let's see how many "I don't like speculation" comments we can have per post per day for the next year, year and a half.
Don't like it? Don't read it. The god damned HEADLINE says that it's about Goblins and Worgen.
Do you read a newspaper and complain loudly about how much you hate the sports section, while still reading it?
Quit yer bitchin.
Shilling Jul 26th 2009 9:15PM
Heh, does seem like every other article contains the words "goblins and worgen".
I agree that it's all got the barest of foundations. A lot of gullible people are going to be very dissapointed, thanks to wowinsider.
schm0 Jul 26th 2009 9:26PM
@Sengir: I completely agree.Take a look at the opening statement of this article: "Ever since word broke about the possibility of playing either a worgen or a goblin..." Word did not "break" about the "possiblity" of playing a worgen or a goblin. All that was discovered was new masks with new artwork on them. THAT'S IT! Everything else is just speculation.
@Vell: I agree. Leave this to the forums.
@Jay: You're completely dead-on. New masks, that's it. It'd be fun to pretend you're a goblin or a worgen for Halloween. (Gnome being the scariest of all, of course.)
@Alch: Lets! I don't like speculation.
The only reason why this is getting any attention at all is the interview with Tom Chilton where he says Blizz likes to "pre-seed" races into the game. However, this was not true with Draenei. In addition, we didn't get a single new playable race with WotLK.
Yes, it's fun to speculate, but why not include ogres, murolcs, vrykul and naga too? They ALL appear in the collections of masks, seen here: http://static.mmo-champion.com/mmoc/images/news/2009/july/10128masks.jpg
It's fine to discuss, but let's not over-hype something to the point where masks turn into rumors that turn into "possibilities" that turn into articles on how to RP the new upcoming races in the next expansion *cough* allegedly *cough*.
Jp Jul 26th 2009 9:31PM
Hey guys, you know what's fun? Bringing down people on the internet! God, I love doing that! Ever since that bully stole my lunch money in the third grade, I really just like making sure other people don't have fun... on the internet, where I have power, thanks to anonymity.
Ostego Jul 26th 2009 10:03PM
@Alchemistmerlin:
his point is that when we come to wow.com we don't want to see the same damn story every single time when there could be other articles in it's place. Like when MJ died and thats all we saw on the new... got pretty old pretty fast.
Cowy Jul 26th 2009 11:05PM
Its not hurting anything to ponder the infinite directions the game can move towards. The great thing about WOW is that it is very open to all sorts of possibilities. It has so many doors that one could spend hours peeking into the keyhole of.
I love speculation, it gets me hopeful when times are slow.
MazokuRanma Jul 27th 2009 12:20AM
It also seems ridiculous to think we're a year, year and a half away from knowing this. We knew about Draenei and Blood Elves long before BC actually came out.
I believe we'll get some actual information in less than a month at BlizzCon. I think they're going to announce the next expansion at the very least, and I wouldn't be surprised if new races/classes are covered if they're coming.
Olicon Jul 27th 2009 3:22AM
The haters are really just jealous that they weren't the first to come up with the theory, or the first to datamine these textures out. I hope they have never secretly wished to wield Warglaives or Frostmourne (or Ashbringer, for that matter) before they were(are) released in the game. Because that would fall under speculation, won't they?
Friday_Knight Jul 27th 2009 3:51AM
Look I totally understand you guys who say the masks aren't proof enough. I did some searching around on MMO Champ and found a link to some video proof that was datamined out of the PTR files that confirm animation for new worgen models. Speculation is one thing but you can't argue with facts. Check it out for yourself:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=edaJP3Lp0Gg
lazymangaka Jul 27th 2009 9:04AM
It would be one thing if it were just baseless speculation, but the case built for having playable Worgen and Goblins does make sense. There wouldn't have been any story at all if all we had to go on was a post someone made on a forum somewhere saying "Goblins and Worgen playable next expansion." The fact that there's evidence of any sort that could logically point toward the drawn conclusion is inevitably going to fuel the fires of speculation.
Have some fun with it, everybody else seems to be.
Veneroso Jul 26th 2009 8:13PM
Well, as far as Worgen are concerned, remember that Arugal had been very busy with his experiments in Silverpine Forest. And he also has a quest line out in Grizzly hills. Its very possible that while the Greymane Wall protected them from the Scourge, it may not have protected them from Arugal and his Worgen. They may very well have either been turned into Worgen or otherwise infected.
Roki Jul 27th 2009 12:58AM
I fail to see your Logic here.
We Killed Arugal back in SFK; stopping his experiments in Silverpine.
We just -killed- Arugal again. Making him unable to y'know do anything.
We killed him in Grizzly Hills; a Continent away from Gilneas.
As you stated The Plague of Undeath, created by Ner'Zhul and Kel'Thuzad two awesomely powerful people, was unable to get through the greymane wall.
Not to mention the alliance have no idea of whats going on in gilneas, Which lead my to assume that the Kirin tor have at least tried to find out via magic at least once but failed.
Yet one Dead reject wizard can somehow penetrate the barrier and turn the whole population of Gilneas into Worgen ?
Alexran Jul 26th 2009 8:30PM
You seem to forget Arugal's bearing on the origin of the Silverpine/Gilneas Worgen.
DO'H!!!!
Alexran Jul 26th 2009 8:32PM
I seriously expected better from Wow.com. How could any lore nerd completely forget Arugal and his worgen experiments in lieu of some meshugannah fakakta bunk about the emerald dream.? Come on.
Falcon6 Jul 26th 2009 8:55PM
He didn't forget. He even mentioned the Gilneas stuff before he went on his idea. He has just about as any right to speculate as you do on what might be the story behind it.
Besides, there are sources for Worgen beyond Arugal. The Scythe of Elune, for example.
If it's true that both the Emerald Dream and the Maelstrom are in the next expansion, then the Worgen could be creatures of a world like the Emerald Dream...or even the Emerald Dream itself. [their "big bad" is the Emerald Flame, after all]
And if it's just the Maelstrom next expansion, then the Arugal Worgen could have reason to expose themselves because of what the naga are doing to their coastline in Gilneas. Either way, the Emerald Dream explanation would help with their ties with the Alliance, as the good king Varian doesn't seem to be one who would enjoy having such company unless a group in the Alliance already supports them.
Alexran Jul 26th 2009 9:01PM
Perhaps, but the Night Elf died somewhere in Duskwood and the scythe went missing. Rumor has it that the Dark Riders took it. Makes sense. But note that she had absolutely nothing to with Arugal and didnt even make anywhere near Gilneas/Silverpine.