Know Your Lore: The Red Dragonflight, Page 3

The red dragonflight didn't even notice the first war, and probably wouldn't have noticed the second either, if not for Deathwing. The crafty old aspect of earth had managed to pierce the magics that kept him from finding the Demon Soul, and while he couldn't use it himself, he could lead others to it: soon the red dragonflight, even the dragonqueen herself and her ancient mate Tyrannastrasz were under the control of filthy little mortals from another world, the orcs of the Dragonmaw clan.
This humiliating period of captivity lasted eight years, while the Dragonmaw at Grim Batol kept hold of the Demon Soul. During that time the aspect of life was forced to breed constantly in order that the orcs might use her children as living weapons against the other mortal races. To put this into perspective, aliens from another world who'd sold their very souls to demons by drinking their foul and tainted blood repeatedly used a magical artifact to rape both the dragonqueen and her elder consort by proxy and then took the resulting children of the greatest protector of life imaginable and hurled them, barely out of the egg, into combat that saw them slaughtered at a time when all the dragonflights (including the red) were in decline and every hatchling was precious. This forced breeding so weakened Tyrannastrasz (not to mention that he was actually older than his queen, and not blessed with the power of the Titans to compensate) that in the end he chose death fighting Deathwing over the possibility that it might continue.
Eventually, a ragtag band of misfits including that time traveling red dragon and human mage, a high elf ranger and an extremely crazy dwarf helped destroy the Demon Soul and restored the power lost to it to the four aspects who had been tricked into helping with its creation, including Alexstrasza. So restored, the four aspects fought Deathwing (and were kicking his scaly, crackling, lava seeping keister when he bravely ran away) and Alexstrasza used her restored powers to help create new blue dragons to revitalize the blue flight to some degree. (Perhaps she couldn't have managed it before the Demon Soul's destruction, and also possibly enduring her own offspring's dire fate at the hands of the orcs moved her.) The dragons also assumed control of Grim Batol, the site of their eight year ordeal, perhaps to guard it against intrusion or possibly simply out of a desire to keep their shame to themselves.
Following the second war the red dragons were curiously absent from the third, although they may well have simply been too demoralized and damaged by their experiences to truly take part. They did station guardians at the battlefield following the destruction of the World Tree, and did not give Fandral Staghelm their blessing for the second world tree Teldrassil. They did, however, send an agent to oppose the work of Nefarian at Blackrock Mountain, the red dragon Vaelestrasz, who unfortunately fell victim to Nefarian and had to be put down by mortal adventurers on their way to kill the black dragon. They were forced to abandon Grim Batol but recently due to events in the novel Night of the Dragon and have not yet returned (and it seems unlikely they will find time to do so). The upcoming raid instance the Ruby Sanctum will expand on what the red dragonflight's current concerns are.
Since then, red dragons have been most notable in their efforts to oppose the blue dragonflight and Malygos in Northrend as the aspect of magic sought to utterly cut off the mortal races from the magical power flowing through the world's ley lines. While an argument could certainly be made that the mortal races are often dangerously incapable of controlling the magic they unleash and that Malygos might have finally been doing what he should have done at the Well of Eternity ten thousand years earlier, in the end his reckless alterations to the world's magic caused as much damage as it would have prevented, and the red dragonflight was forced to oppose him. His death came at the hands of a group of mortals assisted by a host of red drakes.
Currently the red dragons are led by Alexstrasza and her surviving consort Korialstasz. There's not much hierarchy aside from this: red dragons such as Caelestrasz or Vaelestrasz are, after all, the children of Alexstrasza and revere her both as mother and leader. It is unclear if the dragon aspects are in fact truly siblings or if they simply refer to themselves as such due to their position as being directly empowered by the Titans themselves, but with the revelation of Galakrond as the progenitor of all dragonkind, it's certainly possible.
This humiliating period of captivity lasted eight years, while the Dragonmaw at Grim Batol kept hold of the Demon Soul. During that time the aspect of life was forced to breed constantly in order that the orcs might use her children as living weapons against the other mortal races. To put this into perspective, aliens from another world who'd sold their very souls to demons by drinking their foul and tainted blood repeatedly used a magical artifact to rape both the dragonqueen and her elder consort by proxy and then took the resulting children of the greatest protector of life imaginable and hurled them, barely out of the egg, into combat that saw them slaughtered at a time when all the dragonflights (including the red) were in decline and every hatchling was precious. This forced breeding so weakened Tyrannastrasz (not to mention that he was actually older than his queen, and not blessed with the power of the Titans to compensate) that in the end he chose death fighting Deathwing over the possibility that it might continue.
Eventually, a ragtag band of misfits including that time traveling red dragon and human mage, a high elf ranger and an extremely crazy dwarf helped destroy the Demon Soul and restored the power lost to it to the four aspects who had been tricked into helping with its creation, including Alexstrasza. So restored, the four aspects fought Deathwing (and were kicking his scaly, crackling, lava seeping keister when he bravely ran away) and Alexstrasza used her restored powers to help create new blue dragons to revitalize the blue flight to some degree. (Perhaps she couldn't have managed it before the Demon Soul's destruction, and also possibly enduring her own offspring's dire fate at the hands of the orcs moved her.) The dragons also assumed control of Grim Batol, the site of their eight year ordeal, perhaps to guard it against intrusion or possibly simply out of a desire to keep their shame to themselves.
Following the second war the red dragons were curiously absent from the third, although they may well have simply been too demoralized and damaged by their experiences to truly take part. They did station guardians at the battlefield following the destruction of the World Tree, and did not give Fandral Staghelm their blessing for the second world tree Teldrassil. They did, however, send an agent to oppose the work of Nefarian at Blackrock Mountain, the red dragon Vaelestrasz, who unfortunately fell victim to Nefarian and had to be put down by mortal adventurers on their way to kill the black dragon. They were forced to abandon Grim Batol but recently due to events in the novel Night of the Dragon and have not yet returned (and it seems unlikely they will find time to do so). The upcoming raid instance the Ruby Sanctum will expand on what the red dragonflight's current concerns are.
Since then, red dragons have been most notable in their efforts to oppose the blue dragonflight and Malygos in Northrend as the aspect of magic sought to utterly cut off the mortal races from the magical power flowing through the world's ley lines. While an argument could certainly be made that the mortal races are often dangerously incapable of controlling the magic they unleash and that Malygos might have finally been doing what he should have done at the Well of Eternity ten thousand years earlier, in the end his reckless alterations to the world's magic caused as much damage as it would have prevented, and the red dragonflight was forced to oppose him. His death came at the hands of a group of mortals assisted by a host of red drakes.
Currently the red dragons are led by Alexstrasza and her surviving consort Korialstasz. There's not much hierarchy aside from this: red dragons such as Caelestrasz or Vaelestrasz are, after all, the children of Alexstrasza and revere her both as mother and leader. It is unclear if the dragon aspects are in fact truly siblings or if they simply refer to themselves as such due to their position as being directly empowered by the Titans themselves, but with the revelation of Galakrond as the progenitor of all dragonkind, it's certainly possible.






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
Sunstreaker84 Feb 23rd 2010 6:25PM
Fantastic article! I'd love a bibliography. Reading this made me realize how much lore I've missed by not reading the books and manga. Great work.
Mike Feb 23rd 2010 6:26PM
Great article!
jasonkidd1234 Feb 23rd 2010 6:34PM
The dragons have always intrigued me. I've been a fan of Dragons since I was a child and realized Dinosaurs just lack the flair of dragons, and WoW's dragons have been no exception. I admit I was disapointted that you couldn't tame dragons as a hunter (Next to taming tigers, that was the main reason for playing a hunter), but I'm glad you can't as now learning the lore it would seem wrong to tame them.
Some questions though, Where exactly did the proto dragons come from. They look similar to the Pterro birds, and somewhat similar to the Devilsaurs.
I'm also kinda big on how evolution works, and even though WoW isn't real, I've sort of become a WoW evolution buff, looking at the history of the Trolls, Tauren, Goblins, etc and possible connections makes me all giddy inside.
ben Feb 23rd 2010 7:07PM
Spoiler alert!
Tauren come from cows.
hauger101 Feb 23rd 2010 8:57PM
as i know it the proto drakes are actually the un-evolved forms of the dragon aspects. So the aspects are the decendants of the drakes
hauger101 Feb 23rd 2010 9:05PM
"From Galakrond's offspring, known today as proto-dragons, the Titans shaped flights of dragons to the vital (to them, at least) task of preserving their hard-fought order."
Meant to input the above quote.
exogenesis. Feb 24th 2010 2:49AM
Trolls were supposedly night elves thousands and thousands of years ago. I'm not entirely sure where I heard that, but I think it's correct.
Wulfkin Feb 24th 2010 4:13AM
Its an interesting question about the Proto-Drake evolution that we simply do not know. Working backwards we know that there simply were these big flying lizards called Proto-Drakes, then there was Galakrond a special really big proto-drake, and from him the modern evolved version of Dragons was created.
2 important details here are not clear. First, was Galakrond just a really big proto-dragon who the Titans grabbed and used as a template to make something really awesome? Or was Galakrond representative of the way proto-dragons were evolving anyway and the titans just speeded things up? After all, he had a name, was that given to him or was it his own? Was Galakrond and his kind intelligent and self-aware. Are all proto-drakes intelligent? Lots of questions.
The second issue is the one you raise, what happened before proto-drakes? Evolution is a bit of a murky subject in the Warcraft universe. Whilst many races have now been revealed to be titan-constructs or something-that-bumped-into-some-magic (meh - evles), you also have races like trolls, tauren, aqir and proto-dragons which evolved 'naturally'. Possibly the proto-dragon race was some kind of evolved devilsaur as you suggest. Alternatively maybe it was something entirely different, which we never see anymore.
I personally like to think that the proto-dragon race was some kind of flying reptile creature that evovled very early on in Azeroth's history. The early millenia of Azeroth's history make it sound like a hellish place, ripped apart by Old Gods who had corrupted the elemental forces of their own world. As such proto-proto-dragons were probably some kind of flying beast, made hardy by their difficult environment, but able to rise above the chaos and evolve into something that was more than simply bestial. Things carried on like this and when the Titans started tidying up the mess, the proto-dragons were the most intelligent, self-aware creatures on the planet (who weren't malicious tenetacled gods).
thebarrenschat.wordpress.com
Wowcoholic Feb 24th 2010 11:29AM
Iit will be interesting to see if any of these "evolution" questions are answered or at least brought up when they open Uldum, south of Tanaris/Un'Goro.
Task Feb 23rd 2010 6:35PM
I have a query, will you be continuing KYL with the other Dragonflights with their respective leaders?
Awesome job once again :D
/salute
Anne Stickney Feb 23rd 2010 6:46PM
I'll answer that: Yes.
Banic Rhys Feb 23rd 2010 6:56PM
Boy howdy, I'm excited!
jfofla Feb 23rd 2010 6:40PM
Rossi, I am impressed!
I love these Lore Articles and would welcome more in the future.
Nice!
elstor Feb 23rd 2010 6:51PM
Question then, what about the infinite dragonflight? Maybe a KYL on them would be nice unless I'm just missing one. Are they even a real dragonflight? Or did they just make themselves one?
lawnmowerasassin Feb 23rd 2010 7:09PM
The answer is unknown. The most popular theories are: They are a sect of the bronze flight from the future sent back to try to prevent something from happening; they are the pawns of an Old God who controls time (This assumes the theory that each Old God has a corresponding Dragon Aspect to oppose its sphere of influence); and another theory is that they could be the result of further tampering by the black dragonflight (chromatic, netherwing, twilight, ??? , infinite?). Hope that helps, again the short answer is just we have no idea.
Clydtsdk-Rivendare Feb 23rd 2010 7:11PM
The thing about the infinites is that nobody's quite sure how they came into existence, nor do we know much about what they're doing beyond messing with Azeroth's key events. The bronzes say the timeline messing will tear reality apart or something like that, except Nozdormu (who is conveniently MIA) is probably the infinite's leader (see the quest in Dragonblight).
Draelan Feb 23rd 2010 8:44PM
I'm actually a fan of the idea that the Infinites were created by Nozdormu to give his successor some hands-on training. Nozdormu knows he is going to die, hence why he has a designated successor. It would not be out of the question that the Aspect of Time knows his successor will face trouble after he has died, and wishes to ensure he is properly prepared to handle it.
I just hope it doesn't turn into some "lol, Nozdormu created the infinites to try and prevent his own death but it caused his death 'cause now you need to kill him for phat lewtz for screwing with the time stream lol". That would be boring and annoying that the Aspect of Time, who already KNOWS about his own death, would fall for something like that.
But those are just my thoughts.
Korenn Feb 24th 2010 8:55AM
All the places where the infinite dragonflight have so far interfered have been directly related to the orcs and their dealings with humans. I like to think that somewhere in the not too distant future, the orcs (or the other mortals in response to the orcs) are going to screw something up so immensely that Nozdormu sees no other option but to create the Infinite dragonflight and try to prevent it from happening, consequences be damned.
Ofcourse, seeing as the orcs have a track record of destroying an entire planet already, that 'something' would have to be pretty bad :)
Franlkin Feb 24th 2010 12:29PM
The infinites have also interfered at Stratholme, which had nothing to do with the orcs.
Ookami.kun Feb 24th 2010 2:32PM
@Draelan
Well there you go, you've just explained the whole "destruction of reality" issue... the last instance of the last expansion of WoW is to create a paradox dealing with Noz. :D