Know Your Lore: Bolvar Fordragon, page 2

Bolvar went north, to lead the forces against the Lich King. Alliance players questing through Dragonblight run into him unexpectedly during a quest chain at Wintergarde Keep. In helping the 7th Legion out at Wintergarde, it's revealed that the appearance of Naxxramas is the result of Thel'zan the Duskbringer. Once known as Inigo Montoy, a priest down in Eastern Plaguelands, he's now been raised as a lich. It's up to the players to kill him -- and during the seemingly hopeless fight, Bolvar appears to help out.
Fun fact: If you are playing through on a character that completed the Masquerade quest chain prior to its removal from the game, Bolvar will tell you it's nice to see you still alive and kicking, and thank you for your help in Stormwind so long ago.
After Bolvar takes his leave from Wintergarde, Alliance players are sent to help him out at Angrathar. Bolvar's been busy assembling troops for a particularly bold move -- confronting the Lich King at his doorstep. He has an odd ally in the form of Draenosh Saurfang, son of Varok (aka the baddest orc that ever lived). While the Horde and Alliance forces are at each other's throats here and there in Northrend, at Angrathar there is no quarrel between the two -- obviously both Bolvar and Saurfang realize that fighting each other is an idiotic notion in the face of a far greater threat. After assisting the red dragonflight with retrieving the Scythe of Anitok, a weapon that should prove helpful in upcoming battles, players are sent back to Bolvar Fordragon one last time.
This is the last moment of Bolvar's life -- the plague of the Forsaken slowly infusing his body and leeching the life from it, he looks to the sky and sees the red drakes led by Alexstraza herself, razing the area to the ground with their fire. Bolvar Fordragon is, effectively, no more.
Or is he? Later in the game, much, much later in the game, players running through Ulduar and fighting Yogg-Saron are treated to three different visions in the boss's brain room. The first is a vision of the creation of the Dragon Soul, an artifact created by Neltharion, who had been driven mad by the Old Gods. The second, a vision of the assassination of King Llane by Garona the half-orc; more than likely a reference to the events contained in the Warcraft comics, which I'll be recapping at a later date. The third vision is of the Lich King with an orc death knight by his side, torturing someone referred to as an Immolated Champion. The dialogue between the two, as well as commentary by Yogg-Saron, is as follows:
The Lich King: Your resilience is admirable.
Immolated Champion yells: Arrrrrrgh!
Immolated Champion: I'm not afraid of you!
The Lich King: I will break you as I broke him.
Yogg-Saron: Yrr n'lyeth... shuul anagg!
Yogg-Saron: He will learn...no king rules forever. Only death is eternal!

The Immolated Champion is Bolvar Fordragon. This was the subject of heavy speculation when the sound files and the images of the Immolated Champion were released, but there's no doubt about it anymore, that's Bolvar. Captured by the Lich King after the events at Angrathar, Bolvar was tortured mercilessly in an attempt to fashion a death knight out of him, much like Deathbringer Saurfang, the remnants of Varok's son. But Bolvar would not be turned -- showing an admirable amount of resilience; he resisted the Lich King's control.
When players finally entered Icecrown Citadel for the first time, they heard Bolvar again:
The Lich King says: The breaking of this one has been taxing. The atrocities that I have committed upon his soul. He has resisted for so long, but he will bow down before his king soon.
Highlord Bolvar Fordragon says: NEVER! I... I will never... serve... you!
And players that have defeated the Lich King discover Bolvar's final fate. From staunch defender and advisor to Stormwind's throne, to defender and protector of the world itself:
Bolvar, a charred shadow of his former self unselfishly and without reservation takes the mantle of the Lich King as his own.
But how did Bolvar survive? One can only speculate, and I've thought this over ever since I first saw the Lich King's death. Bolvar states in the final sequence that the dragons' flames sealed his fate, which got me thinking. Here is a man stricken with a plague of death that is leeching through and destroying his body -- and as he dies, his eyes lift skyward. Red dragons soar overhead, scorching the ground with their flames. Red dragon flames. The flames of life -- the only thing that can counteract a plague of death and keep it from spreading. Bolvar was smack in the middle of the flames, and rather than killing him, they brought him back from the edge of death that the plague had pushed him to. No longer truly alive, yet imbued with the life-giving essence of those flames, Bolvar Fordragon was unable to die. The Lich King somehow retrieved his body, intent upon forging a new champion -- but Bolvar's spirit could not be broken.
We saw a faint echo of that spirit so many years ago when that paladin faced off against a slew of elite dragonkin and inexplicably won. It's the same spirit that kept him devoted to Stormwind, the spirit that hoped for peace, the spirit that loved young Anduin Wrynn and vowed to keep him safe. It was that strength of will that kept him from falling under the Lich King's command -- and he knew that there had to be someone, something holding the Scourge back. Someone had to take over the mantle when Arthas fell -- Yogg-Saron stated as much in his vision. Only death is eternal -- and if there is nothing to hold back that plague of death, the world would fall, and only death would remain.

With the Lich King gone, Bolvar Fordragon was free -- but no longer himself. The flames of the red dragons had eaten away most of his body, leaving behind a charred, unrecognizable mass that would surely horrify anyone he encountered. Unable to die, and unable to truly live, there was nothing left for Bolvar to do but take up the mantle. He alone showed the strength and tenacity required to hold back the Scourge, and he alone had no other real place in the world. No longer a leader that people would follow, unable to die and take his place among the world's heroes, Bolvar was meant for this task, utterly and completely.
While Tirion Fordring would've gladly taken the place, he was a lousy choice. Why? Because despite his motives for good, he is still willing to take matters into his own hands and make choices that may or may not be for the good of Azeroth. Rather than seeking help or advice upon retrieving Arthas' frozen heart, he instead made a snap judgment and destroyed it. Could Arthas have been redeemed? Not according to Fordring -- but did Fordring really know, or was he simply ticked off enough that he decided to call Arthas on his bluff? Regardless of the answer, a human being that is working on his own motivations wouldn't make a good choice for the Lich King -- his corruption at the hands of the Lich King would be inevitable.
For what is being taken here isn't just a simple title -- it's that entity that Kil'jaeden created so long ago. Arthas is dead, well and truly dead if the cinematic is any indication. Ner'zhul may or may not have been killed at the hands of Arthas the Lich King in the novel Arthas: Rise of the Lich King, but one thing is clear -- at that last moment, at the Lich King's final breaths, the only thing remaining is a tattered scrap of what was once Arthas Menethil. No redemption, no final moment of glory, no cackling, mad former orc shaman. Simply a man in the spirit of his father's arms, staring off into space and uttering his final words:
"I see only darkness before me."
There is speculation that Arthas, at the end of the Rise of the Lich King novel, didn't kill Ner'zhul. Instead, he now lords over Ner'zhul's spirit, rather than collaborating with it. If Arthas is gone, however, that piece of Arthas that crushed Ner'zhul's spirit is no longer present, meaning either the Lich King is just an entity combined with Bolvar Fordragon now -- or that Ner'zhul's spirit is once more free to have a chat with Bolvar about the state of the world and how much nicer it'd be if everyone simply ceased to be.

Is he dead for good? Is there more to his story? A post from the developer chat on Twitter has some interesting news:
Q. Will Ner'zhul appear at any point in 3.3 or the near future?
A. Well, he is a chunk of the Lich King now. But if you mean will he appear as an orc, we're not ready to tell his story just yet. We have a lot of stories left to tell, but his is a good one.
Sadly, this doesn't really answer any questions. It could mean that Ner'zhul is alive, and his spirit is still in the Lich King and now working on Bolvar. It could mean they'd like to release a novel about Ner'zhul's life. It could mean Ner'zhul had a nephew that nobody's heard about who decided to travel back in time, it could mean the details of Ner'zhul's brief but passionate affair with Myra Tyrngaarde will at last be revealed. There is no solid information to build on -- and there won't be, until Blizzard decides to reveal it. Players noted a change in Bolvar's voice as he spoke the last lines of the cinematic, and people are going wild, saying that it's proof that Ner'zhul is still there and present, and we haven't seen the last of him. Unfortunately, we have no proof of this.

What we do know is this -- Bolvar Fordragon, champion of Stormwind, the man of legend that once battled umpteen elite dragonkin in Stormwind Citadel itself, is dead. The Lich King has risen once more to sit upon his Frozen Throne and control the Scourge of Icecrown and beyond. Whether he remains as steadfastly devoted to protecting the world of Azeroth, or slowly becomes corrupted from within once more, is a story yet to be told.
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Reader Comments (Page 3 of 5)
Vogie Feb 20th 2010 8:33PM
Yeah, I noticed that too. After all that, the dreaded corrupter of souls and the "Lich King handbook - How to Destroy Friends and Dominate People" known as Frostmourne was just left on the ground. Just laying there.
Hopefully not to allow for a 6th expansion, "Return of the Lich Captain", when Captain Placeholder dons the accursed blade and dominates Bolvar's spirit, restarting the events to this point. Undead pirates would be pretty epic though... YAR.
musicchan Feb 20th 2010 8:58PM
I also noticed that when Bolvar had the helm on, the light from the eyes was NOT BLUE. Instead, it had the same fiery quality that made up his body. I know eyes aren't everything, but I think it indicates that it's not the same being controlling the lich king and that there is more good than evil that's being used now.
Athinah Feb 21st 2010 12:25PM
Excaclty! the eyes are even a differnt color, i forgot about that.
And frostmorne was shatterd thats why it was left there
JoeShmoe64 Feb 20th 2010 8:20PM
For some reason, I get this nagging feeling that Bolvar won't be seen or heard from until the final patch. KJ has usurped Sargeras and as Thrall lays dead, Varian's vision is fading, the Ashbringer, as effective against demons as it is against undead, lays shattered, we see a portal open, and millions of Scourge burst through as Bolvar walks through, using his necromantic powers to bring back all our allies; Kil'jaeden's own handiwork being what saves us all.
Aureliusz Feb 21st 2010 1:35AM
That would be ultimate.
reswab Feb 20th 2010 8:24PM
For Bolvar! For The Alliance!
I wonder if this is what yoggy had planned all along. He influenced Garona into killing Varian's father and if Varian hadn't become king, Bolvar wouldn't have had to do all the stuff he did in vanilla wow. Then WoTK comes out and Blamo, Bolvar is smack dab in the face! Then Yoggy influences The Lich king into torturing him and then Wham, BOlvar is suddenly the only one allowed to take on the Crown. So this guy is dragon fire infused life inside'm and hes got powers over death. The old gods want out of their prisons, The old gods wanna raze the planet, and now they have influence over this guy.
poor bolvar, guy never stood a chance.
Lol, I can see it now, a Caverns of time instance where we have to go back and prevent the infinite dragons from stopping the events at the Wrathgate from happening. Why? Cause we need'm ta die fo the Lich King! : (
Eddy Feb 20th 2010 8:26PM
This was such a fitting tribute to a wonderful character who many people care a great deal about. I too remember Bolvar's strength and courage back from my Alliance days, and while I usually prefer lesser characters with less epic storylines, he embodies so much of what the game is about- honor and loyalty, working with his people and stepping in when they needed him most. He was a steady leader and a wonderful friend.
I know every time I see scourge in Azeroth in Cataclysm, I'll think that it is Bolvar's hand restraining them.
Thank you for this very moving article. It affected me very much.
Diavola Feb 20th 2010 8:34PM
Until Icecrown Citadel, I always thought Arthas was the most tragic figure in Warcraft history.
Bolvar totally wins that title now.
Thraelys Feb 20th 2010 8:50PM
Okay, near the end of your article you quote Arthas' final words "I see only darkness before me." Now, I know that this doesn't have much to do about the great Bolvar, but this has been nagging at my brain since I spoiled the end cinematic for myself. Is that sentence really only translated as to what Arthas is really seeing? Before the fateful sentence that supposedly sums up no redemption for bad-boy Arthas, King Terenas tells him no king rules forever. I know this may sound like a long shot or that I'm stretching, but the way Arthas responds could be translated differently because of the pause in his sentence structure. Watch it over again and you may see it different.
Terenas "No king rules forever."
Arthas "I see. Only Darkness before me."
If taken that way, it sounds like Arthas has realized his faults. Couple that with his first words "Father! Is it over?" and that's a pretty good argument. Then it seems that he alludes to the idea Uther gave us that the Lich King must live on through somebody when he characterizes the Darkness having to rule forever and through an entity that can hold it in check.
Sorry for being a bit off topic.
Bobbo Feb 21st 2010 1:19AM
First, the idea of Arthas on his death bed responding to "No king rules forever" with the line "I see" is just incredibly hilarious to me. "Gotcha, pops. thx."
The bigger takeaway with that line, which I definitely believe is a single sentence and not two, is that Arthas is not going to be redeemed, whether he had belatedly realized his faults, kissed his pappy's massive man hand, or anything else. The Light already decided he was a full-out prick, and they weren't about to let him have his happy-ghost-at-the-Ewok-party ending.
Thraelys Feb 21st 2010 4:10AM
Go back and watch the cinematic where he responds. He doesn't respond as the cocky, self-righteous, hot-headed child he was when he culled Stratholme. Listen to the tone of voice and the tone of desperation. It's not completely out of this world that he can't come to realize that nobody can rule forever. Yes, maybe he was past redemption and was on his way to eternal suffering, but that doesn't mean that it's impossible for him to at least realize he has been a bit of a toolbag.
My point of speculation was that it could be two sentences or it could be one and the way the voice acting was recorded could be something Blizz did on purpose. I interpreted it as two sentences. Hilarious as that may be to you, that's how I heard it. Don't respond to flame me, be constructive.
Banic Rhys Feb 21st 2010 7:56AM
Yes, but what if when Arthas said "Father, is it over?", he meant "Father, have I lost?" rather than what most people believe he meant which is "Father, am I free?"
RogueJedi86 Feb 20th 2010 9:14PM
Bolvar becoming the Lich King really just reeks of what tvtropes calls "Status Quo Is God", as seen here: http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/StatusQuoIsGod
If Bolvar is truly in control of the Scourge now, why doesn't he just order all the Scourge into one small area for the Alliance and Horde to blow away with bombs and Paladins? Or order them all to go to the very deepest part of the ocean and stay there. There are countless ways the Scourge could be ordered into situations that make them no longer a problem for anyone on Azeroth ever again. But none of them will be done, because Blizzard can't have all the undead in every zone be removed from the game, because then they'd have to make up something else to fill in those voids. It'd be too much work for them to think up new bad things for us to kill in the Plaguelands and Duskwood and 2/3 of Northrend. They'd have to redo a big part of the starting zone for Forsaken too.
I really wish Blizzard would just make a big change like this stick. If you're gonna kill the Lich King, let him stay dead, and let us be done with Scourge and undead. We can't have all the undead gone save for a few random necromancers who're a threat to no one. Cataclysm is supposed to redo the world, so let's redo it. Have Bolvar the Toasted King order all the Scourge to the southern coasts of Dragonblight so they can be destroyed by the huge cataclysmic tidal waves from Deathwing's emergence. I know I can't be the only person who is tired of these zombies, especially after Icecrown.
My rant aside, yeah, Bolvar is a pretty cool guy. Eh controls the scourge and doesnt afraid of anything.
Tooay Feb 20th 2010 9:46PM
Bolvar most likely isn't in full control of the Scourge, though. When Kil'Jaeden created the Lich King, he had him imprisoned in the Frozen Throne, where his power grew exponentially over time. Only after a little whole, he was able to start gaining more and more control over undeath and build a stronger army.
Once the throne was split, his power rapidly started fading, and he called Arthas to him. When he took up the helmet and became the new Lich King, Arthas too spent some time sitting on his arse doing nothing. Sleeping and gaining power, until he found strength again to rise and awake his soldiers.
Bolvar will do the same. Him, and the Scourge, will lay mostly dormant for years, with the Scourge reined back and held in thrall.
Hollow Leviathan Feb 20th 2010 10:16PM
Likely Bolvar DOES order the Scourge to stand down, although he cannot dismantle the forces otherwise his Lich King powers will fade to the point where the Burning Legion could install a new undead force onto Azeroth, or destroy his mind and wholly break him where Arthas could not.
Just like in the last expansion, where by the de facto lore that we're all in Northrend now, the Blood elves are all either wretches like Kael'thas or took their sense and returned to Silvermoon, and The Burning Legion has been broken and the outlands retaken. The problem is that the leveling process is supposed to be a progressive story, instead of a persistent world, so 61-70 will always be OMGz Illidan+Kael'thas and 71-80 will always be OMGz Arthas/Lich King.
Ideally 81-85 will have quests/dialogue and such that speaks to the Cataclysm lore that both the Legion and Scourge are no longer immediate threats.
Terestria Feb 23rd 2010 9:57AM
There is good reason to believe that having the higher level undead act against their own self-preservation weakens the Lich King's control over them. This is shown in the attack on Light's Hope during the opening DK story. Arthas essentially sent a bunch of DKs in on a suicide mission, and they gained their freedom after.
If Bolvar ordered them all to a holy bbq outside the Wrathgate, we'd be served zombie ribs galore but the liches and pals would probably give him the rotten finger.
RogueJedi86 Feb 23rd 2010 4:26PM
Let the Lich King lose control, if the act that loses control guarantees the loss of all the Scourge. With all the major Scourge dead, the only Scourge left alive and uncontrollable are the slow Scourge who couldn't get to the slaughterhouse in time. Those slow scourge will be easy pickings. I'd say it's a fair trade, the loss of the Lich King's control for the destruction of 99% of the scourge, meaning we wouldn't need the Lich King's control anymore anyways. The entirety of the Scourge being uncontrolled would be a problem, but not 1% of them. We can easily handle 1%.
I can't imagine mindless Scourge would be able to ascertain intent of commands from the act of the commands. Just ordering them to "Go stand over there for an hour and do nothing" should just be ordered, without the Scourge hearing a secret intent. We know he's ordered them to stand around doing nothing before, just look at the WotLK cinematic trailer of him resurrecting Sindragosa. You see an army of thousands of Scourge just standing there doing nothing, watching the Lich King resurrect a dragon, then doing the bluey eyeglow thing for dramatic appearance.
So I'd say the benefits of eliminating all the Scourge outweigh the risks of losing control.
Ducas Feb 20th 2010 9:42PM
This is a really great article. Excellently written, I especially like the way you tell the story "as is", without trying to jam your own opinions on Bolvar's tale down your readers' throats - your own opinions are dealt with by way of gentle nod rather than loud-mouthed enforcement, something sorely lacking from many other articles on this site. Nothing further to add really, other than thanks for reminding me how epic Bolvar's story was/is. More like this from your staff please, WoW.com!
dkhar Feb 20th 2010 10:07PM
Ok, haven't read Arthas Rise of the Lich King yet, getting close to it, currently reading all of the books (some of them for the 2nd time). But I was under the impression that the frozen throne had Ner'zhul's spirit in it, and joined with arthas when it was destroyed, my main question is this though, why in the cinematic is it the helm that gives fordragon the will to control the scourge. Is the helm a part of that book or something I am missing, I just thought it was a cool looking helm and really didn't have anything to do with controlling the scourge! Because of Ner'zhul's ability to control them psychically, did that ability get somehow transferred to the helm?
Hollow Leviathan Feb 20th 2010 10:09PM
I disagree with the assessment that Bolvar was revived by the power of the red dragonflight breath, but not with certainty. I think that Bolvar died and was revived in undeath alongside Saurfang. You can overhear Alexstrazsa and her consort discussing a secret they know immediately after the Wrathgate. This could either be that the Lich King has stolen the bodies, or possibly that Bolvar is still alive.
Instructor Razuvious must revive Death Knight prospectives in Archerus before bending them to the will of the Lich King or discarding them. Some revived showed original loyalties, and he simply didn't waste his time breaking them. Obviously the Lich King would devote his time to bending such powerful figures as Bolvar and Saurfang the Younger. Yet, Saurfang crumbled, likely due to youth and inexperience.
Thus, Bolvar is undead, and beyond redemption in his own eyes when Fordring hands him the helmet. This is why he wants to be forgotten.