Know Your Lore: Lore 101, Part 2, Page 3

Another way this alteration can be performed is by rewriting historical facts and stating the world has always been this way. The biggest example of this is the origins of the draenei: in the original history of the world, as documented by the book 'Sargeras and the Betrayal,' the following is stated:
During the development of TBC, when the Draenei were announced as the new Alliance race, the following was published on the official Burning Crusade website:The eredar, an insidious race of devilish sorcerers, used their warlock magics to invade and enslave a number of worlds. The indigenous races of those worlds were mutated by the eredar's malevolent powers and turned into demons themselves. Though Sargeras' nearly limitless powers were more than enough to defeat the vile eredar, he was greatly troubled by the creatures' corruption and all-consuming evil. Incapable of fathoming such depravity, the great Titan began to slip into a brooding depression. Despite his growing unease, Sargeras rid the universe of the warlocks by trapping them within a corner of the Twisting Nether.
This created an absolute uproar, as it appeared that Metzen himself had forgotten the origins of the world he created, an impression that was verified by Metzen's apology regarding the matter:Nearly twenty-five thousand years ago, the eredar race arose on the world of Argus. They were extremely intelligent and had a natural affinity for magic in all its myriad forms. Using their gifts, they developed a vast and wondrous society. Unfortunately the eredar's accomplishments caught the attention of Sargeras, the Destroyer of Worlds. He had already begun his Burning Crusade to eradicate all life from the cosmos, and he believed that the brilliant eredar would be pivotal in leading the vast demonic army he was gathering. Thus, he contacted the eredar's three most prominent leaders: Kil'jaeden, Archimonde, and Velen. In exchange for the loyalty of the eredar race, Sargeras offered untold power and knowledge.
Right... To be totally up-front with you guys, it's my bad, straight up. The obvious lore contradiction with Sargeras and his encounter with the eredar was clearly documented in the Warcraft III manual. I wrote those bits about four years ago, and to be totally honest, I simply forgot. Genius, right? With my excitement to get the draenei up to speed and root them more firmly in the setting, I forgot to do my homework and go back over my earlier writing. I can assure you, no one's more crushed about this mistake than I am. I've spent the last few days kicking my own ass over this one. Sucks to fail. It may not always be evident, but we take this story stuff really seriously at Blizzard. It's been one of my personal missions at this company to maintain a high level of integrity throughout the Warcraft game setting (all of them, actually) and I think we've done a pretty decent job of upholding the continuity over the years.

Players were understandably angry about the change, and upset that Metzen could've simply 'forgotten' something so important -- but what you have to keep in mind is that Metzen has an incredibly vast story he's developed, with a huge cast of characters. As an author, when working on a story you're not only keeping track of the characters that exist and the events that have been written (and by the time TBC came out, there were a lot of events), but characters and storylines that have yet to be. What seems obvious to the reader is something that clearly can slip the author's mind in between everything else they are keeping track of. Metzen did the only thing he could do; apologize for the oversight and explain that yes, the events in Burning Crusade are the factual events that actually happened.
While this is an alteration made by rewriting historical facts, it can actually be filed under 'expanding existing history' by looking at it from another perspective. While the denizens of Azeroth were under one impression that historians noted and documented in books like Sargeras and the Betrayal, at the time those books were written, they had no idea the draenei even existed, save for the few mutated, largely insane Lost Ones that roamed the Swamp of Sorrows and the Blasted Lands. Upon actually meeting the draenei, it was obvious that the historians simply got their facts wrong -- easy to do when you weren't actually there.
I'm going to evoke Godwin's Law here and make an analogy: it could be looked at as having history books that stated that the actions against the Jewish people during the Holocaust were warranted, and the Jewish people being presented as being somehow wrong or evil, forcing Hitler to take the actions he took during the course of World War II. Then suddenly, a large group of survivors from the concentration camps are introduced who are not only not evil, but have a very, very different story regarding the events that took place. Considering all you had to work with at first were stories written down by historians that weren't even present when those events happened, you cannot really argue the events of history with people that were actually there when those events took place.

With canon being so iffy, timeline shifts negating current lore, retcons happening periodically and entire previous parts of history being rewritten all the time, what's a lore researcher supposed to do? Well, you can either throw up your hands and say 'to hell with it,' which is no fun at all, or you can simply enjoy the story as it's being written, without getting too attached to events or characters in the way they've been presented.
The passion behind the reactions to timeline shifts and continuity changes is a testament to exactly how convoluted and entertaining the Warcraft story is; and while at times it seems like the story can get out of control, it's obvious from fan reactions that the story behind Warcraft is a good one. People like myself that document lore have to keep in mind everything that's been presented above, and documenting events and history according to lore is a lot more difficult than most people realize. The most important thing for beginners in lore research to remember is this: when it comes to Warcraft history, the best weapon a lore hound can have is an open mind.
Stay tuned for next time, when I talk about speculation, theory, and fanfiction!
Patch 5.2 interview with Dave Kosak
Inside an old alt's vault
The latest patch 5.2 news
All of the latest Mists of Pandaria news





Reader Comments (Page 2 of 4)
Samutz Mar 22nd 2010 4:54PM
His track record with real females is probably pretty bad too, if his pick up lines are anything like his writing.
Mr.X Mar 22nd 2010 5:07PM
1. In the WC3 game, Tyrande and Malfurion act surprised and suspicious of the orcs and humans that have invaded night elf lands, Tyrande in particular speaking of them with complete contempt and disgust. If the timeline was altered, then did that change the events surrounding the night elves reaction to other races such as the orcs?
10,000 years is a long time, they could have forgotten about them, though unlikely.
2. Cenarius fashioned a weapon for the orc Broxigar, an axe made entirely of wood that he used to cleave thousands of demons while fighting the Burning Legion in the past. In WC3, Cenarius starts attacking the orcs outright, without trying any form of negotiation. If his only other contact with an orc was a positive one, did he try talking to the orcs first?
Again he could ahve forgotten about a sole orc and plus they were cutting down a huge amount of trees, that must have made him very angry, plus they probbly still had a stench of demon blood from outland. the entire warsong clan did drink from it if u remember.(least the warriors)
3. Since Krasus traveled to the past and met his former self along with Alexstrasza, and Krasus had the knowledge that the Demon Soul could be shattered with a part of Deathwing (as documented in Day of the Dragon), why didn't Krasus simply destroy the Demon Soul after the Sundering to prevent Alexstrasza's kidnapping in the future?
If you Remember Krasus was knocked out in some battle in the 3rd War of the Acients Books(cant remember when but it was a little bit after they took the demon soul from deathwing) and future krasus said (to Alexstraza) that he would heal but he would have memory gaps.
4. If Broxigar, an orc, was the only mortal to ever have laid a hand on Sargeras himself, does this mean the reason the orcs were corrupted by the Burning Legion in the first place is now because of some sort of revenge against Broxigar and his people?
Sargaras being totally insane would have forgotten all about that, KJ was the one that took them because they were a strong race which could easily be manipulated, i doubt he could have used orges since dranie and orcs where stronger than both, infact orcs actually allied with the orges to kill the dranie. and dont think he had any other option besides those 2.
5. If Rhonin was such a mentor figure to Illidan, why exactly didn't he show up during Burning Crusade and slap Illidan around a little for us? You'd figure he'd be annoyed about the fate of his 'apprentice.'
Probbly mentioning Illaden to Rhonin since he came back to the present, he'll say hes DEAD to me!
iammurlocftw Mar 22nd 2010 5:21PM
Those are some good points to think about, I'm sure night elves could bump their heads sometime in those 10,000 years to forget about the orcs or gotten amnesia. I mean 10,000 years is long even for the immortal.
Which reminds me, if elves are(were) immortal, than how come azeroth didn't run out of space? I mean you've got these immortal beings reproducing for more immortal beings and it keeps going forever and ever!
Mr.X Mar 22nd 2010 5:28PM
Immortal Races usally take longer for there children to grow to mating age and they usally have less children.
Dranie childhood takes centuries and very few children are acutally born
considering that they left argus with round 30ish dranie and they got to a few thousands 25,000 years later in dreador, we srly have too many dranie in game.
ohh and sorry I accidently didn't respond to my own post can someone delete that extra post I made, ty.
Btw anyone HAS any clue to how to change my wow.com account password i cant remember the default one they gave me so i gotta go on email each time. srly WTB a login feature....
minduim Mar 22nd 2010 5:42PM
"10,000 years is a long time, they could have forgotten about them, though unlikely."
"Again he could ahve forgotten about a sole orc"
This may be a matter of opinion, but... immortal guys forgetting about a strange creature (strange to them at the time) that fought so bravely in the most important event in the history of their race? IMHO, that's the same as saying they just forgot important details about the whole fight with the Burning Legion... again (repeating myself) the most important event in the history of their race. IMHO I find it *very* unlikely they would forgot what an orc looks like. But that's me...
Mr.X Mar 22nd 2010 5:53PM
I said unlikely, either way seeing green gaints destroying his trees probblly did make centarious go Enrage.
Oznak Mar 22nd 2010 8:47PM
If you Remember Krasus was knocked out in some battle in the 3rd War of the Acients Books(cant remember when but it was a little bit after they took the demon soul from deathwing) and future krasus said (to Alexstraza) that he would heal but he would have memory gaps.
Right, but wrong. By the end of the novels, when he has the Demon Soul effectively in his power, he does absolutely nothing with it but hide it, knowing full well what will happen. He has, by that point, remembered his queen's fate.
10,000 years is a long time, they could have forgotten about them, though unlikely.
Forgotten the saviors of their race? Unlikely.
Blondies Mar 23rd 2010 4:49AM
Don't you need a part of Deathwing to destroy the Demon Soul? Now, I haven't read The Sundering yet (going for Stormrage first, in case there is something happening in Cataclysm I need to know), but with the limited knowledge I have it would be the fact that he CAN'T destroy the Demon Soul, not that he wont? Please correct me if I'm wrong.
Also, Krasus lost a lot of memories when travelling to the past, and he seemed to have lost more memories when being knocked out? That's what I get from the comments. How about, "He didn't actually know how to destroy it"? It was indestructible besides from a part of DW himself?
Daethar Mar 23rd 2010 2:28PM
@ Mr. X
What exactly are orges and dranie? The sentence "i doubt he could have used orges since dranie and orcs where stronger than both" made me do a double take.
DeepRed Mar 22nd 2010 5:13PM
I remember the flame war on WoWWiki that erupted over the non-inclusion of Finnall Goldensword, after Metzen's statement at the 2009 New York ComicCon. She was mentioned in 2 different RPG books (A&HC and APG), although mentioned only in legend. Still, she would have been an interesting character if she did appear in WoW.
Goodk4t Mar 22nd 2010 5:18PM
When you compare the old Varian model with the new model, you realize how ugly playable humans are...
Alex Mar 22nd 2010 5:20PM
I really enjoyed this article, it makes a really good attempt at bringing some peace of mind to the lore-enthusiastic fans :P.
However, no amount of reasoning in the world could account for them shaping Arthas into a whimp in WotLK.
Ringo Flinthammer Mar 22nd 2010 5:27PM
Arthas is a wimp in WotLK? When?
The person who's been turned into a complete ninny is Jaina, who now comes off like a 12 year old girl who's obsessed with bad romance novels.
Mr.X Mar 22nd 2010 5:25PM
Immortal Races usally take longer for there children to grow to mating age and they usally have less children.
Dranie childhood takes centuries and very few children are acutally born
considering that they left argus with round 30ish dranie and they got to a few thousands 25,000 years later in dreador, we srly have too many dranie in game.
Ringo Flinthammer Mar 22nd 2010 5:28PM
More importantly, it shoots a big hole in the "we can't have high elf characters in the Alliance, because there's not enough of them left" argument from Blizzard. (Profile confusion in PvP still remains as a valid issue, however, not to mention that the Alliance needs more freaking elf players like we need a hole in our collective head.)
Al Mar 22nd 2010 6:04PM
I really don't get the silhouette argument. if they're so far that you can't clearly identify by armour (of course, armour is now pretty much identical), or see the red name above them, then they aren't a threat. Plus all the shape-shifting trinkets one can get.
And sticking Black Humans on the 'evil' side? I can't see any unfortunate implications arising from that..
Tirrimas Mar 22nd 2010 6:25PM
@Al:
I totally agree.
They've already muddied the waters on that score, with all the cross-faction NPCs out there and High Elves using Belf models and such. I don't look at the player model anymore to determine friendliness: I look at the nameplate.
RetPallyJil Mar 22nd 2010 5:34PM
You came up with some amazing illustrations for this one :D Good work!
Skarlette Mar 22nd 2010 6:50PM
Agreed! That comic of Rhonin and Malfurion and Tyrande made me LOL, and the rest were well-chosen, too.
Dreyja Mar 22nd 2010 5:40PM
I understand the frustration with the changes made in the Knaak novels but I have to say that when in comes to Malfurion and Tyrande I am glad for the changes. Call me selfish but I LOVE genuinely heroic heroes. I'm not saying Mary-sue heroes but good people doing what they can. I like Malfurion with all of his self-doubting, he still does what is right.
That being said, I'm not a big fan of Knakk's, "style" of writing and think that C. Golden can write circles around him. :)
I prefer the books, comics, etc. over the WC storyline simply for the fact that the WC story is a forced, two -sided conflict and books can have more flex. :) Now, that fuels the fire of my impatience with the forced, two-sided conflict of WOW. I know I'm feeding my own madness. ;-p
I realize this makes the hard-core WC i, ii and iii players want to pull their hair out though.