Know Your Lore: Current Alliance politics -- the Night Elves page 2

Tyrande managed to escape, though many of her Sentinels were slaughtered by Archimonde, and left Shandris in charge of guarding the forests while she left on a more important mission. It was time to wake up Malfurion and the druids and get their help, because this enemy was far too great for Tyrande and the Sentinels to face alone. She succeeded in waking him, and together they traveled and woke the other druids. But while searching through the Barrow Deeps beneath Hyjal to find the sleeping Druids of the Claw, they discovered something both of them had forgotten about -- the door to the prison that Illidan had been sent to so many thousands of years before. Tyrande suggested they free him, perhaps reminded of what Illidan had said to Malfurion just before his imprisonment, that the elves would need arcane magic, in case the Burning Legion ever returned. Malfurion didn't agree and forbid Tyrande from freeing Illidan.
Or tried to. The thing about Tyrande Whisperwind is that despite her compassion, her devotion to Elune and the priesthood and her supposed "gentle" nature, the absolute last thing you ever want to do is make her angry. At this point, she'd finally been reunited with the man she loved, a man who had turned away from her and deserted her in order to (by all appearances) sleep the centuries away. Rather than show any kind of contrition for his actions, Malfurion had simply stepped up and tried to take a dominant leading role from a woman who'd been doing this for centuries. Not only that, but he tried to forbid this woman from doing something that was by all rights extremely logical to her.
Given this, it's a wonder she even bothered going back for him after she bid him a curt farewell and left to go free Illidan anyway, enraged that Malfurion would have the sheer temerity to forbid her anything. She and the Sentinels that followed her systematically fought their way through the Barrow Deeps, killing her people, the night elves that had been ordered to stand guard, in order to get to him. After freeing him, she begged him to come back and help his people -- and Illidan, who was still besotted with Tyrande after all these centuries, agreed. He left to fight the demons of Felwood, in the process running into Arthas. After a short battle that resulted in a draw, he listened as Arthas told him of the Skull of Gul'dan, a demonic artifact that was responsible for corrupting Felwood. Illidan fought his way to the Skull and then, instead of outright destroying the thing, thought twice -- if the Skull was so powerful, perhaps he could use its powers for his own ... and impress Tyrande in the process.

With the destruction of Nordrassil, Nozdormu's pact was broken and the night elves' immortality was lost. With the Burning Legion defeated, the orcs, humans and night elves parted ways, and Tyrande's people returned to the forests to work on mending the damage done by the Burning Legion.
This is where it all gets tricky. The events just recounted all happened, technically speaking -- but with the War of the Ancients trilogy by Richard A. Knaak, certain events were changed. A human mage named Rhonin was sent to the past along with Krasus, a red dragon who was disguised as an elven mage, and Broxigar, an orc, via a rift in time. The three helped the night elves with the War, and in the process meddled with the timeline -- and that meddling probably changed the events recounted above.
Since Tyrande and Malfurion not only encountered both humans and orcs on this alternate timeline, but helped them and were helped in return, their reactions to the invasion by the human and orc settlements were probably vastly different. Tyrande definitely remembered Broxigar, Rhonin and Krasus; they were all still fresh in her mind during the events of the novel Stormrage, also by Richard A. Knaak. Thus the wariness, the distrust, the implication that humans or paladins were somehow corrupting the forests with their presence and the outright xenophobia she exhibited were theoretically no longer in play.

While it makes it tricky, I'll do my best to trace what happened after in light of the altered timeline. Keep this in mind when I continue with the night elves and their political effect on the Alliance tomorrow.
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 5)
Duckodile May 8th 2010 10:46PM
Bwahaha. Author or not, this totally just made my day (or night, as it were). I love night elves, but that's awesome.
KABLOOIE.
Eregos ftw! May 8th 2010 4:42PM
The thing I loved most about the night elves is how dense they are.
Examples? The highborne in Darnassus. I reviewed their conversation, and the highborne looked like he was about to cry. He said he had important news, something about the world not being like it was before. He went on to say a couple things that may or may not be references to the impending Cataclysm. The sentinel that was pushing him out did not care one bit. She told him that highborn were, in essence, stupid. The highborn even admits to making mistakes and not wanting to make them again. The highborn is not admitted straight to Tyrande to warn her, instead he is forced to wait.
I also love clicking again and again on people like tyrande and other night elves. they're angry messages are so funny
"You are so annoying"
"Don't you have anything better to do"
What's funny is, they have angry tones, but very peaceful voices.
Kaphik May 8th 2010 4:45PM
It's too bad that Blizzard allowe Knack to mess things up so much. The original lore was much more interesting, and less like a cross between a bad Saturday morning cartoon and a soap opera.
F. Somalia May 8th 2010 5:41PM
In defense of Knaak, he's a great author. Stormrage is just freaking awesome! I hope see some of the events from the book show up in the game.
Eldoron May 8th 2010 7:11PM
In defense of good authors, Knaak is NOT.
Coik May 8th 2010 11:40PM
I think Knaak might make a good event planner. While I was forcing myself to read Stormrage, I caught myself thinking "this would be an awesome in-game event" a few times. Of course, Warcraft does suffer from JRPG Syndrome: "Sit back and watch this cutscene, because you're too arse to play it yourself."
Blayze May 8th 2010 4:54PM
Why has no character called Tyrande on her actions? Honestly. Murder some of your fellows to free someone dubbed THE BETRAYER for a very good reason? That's about as stupid as letting a Dreadlord near your chain of command and expecting everything to work out.
Oh, wait.
And yes, Malfurion's first and only response to anything seems to be "blow up an ancient store of magic and make the world worse."
jealouspirate May 8th 2010 5:00PM
Malfurion has actually saved Azeroth a few times now, not something I'd make fun of him for.
Anne Stickney May 8th 2010 5:03PM
Because technically speaking, Tyrande's actions may not have ever happened. Or rather, they didn't happen the way we've been told they happened. Because Rhonin and the gang went back in time and changed things, but we don't know how they changed. But probably she didn't murder people, after the time switch.
Maybe.
...I have a headache.
Zhiva May 8th 2010 5:05PM
# And yes, Malfurion's first and only response to anything seems to be "blow up an ancient store of magic and make the world worse." #
You know, it actually explains all the exploded moonwells in Cata leaked screenshots.
Deathknighty May 8th 2010 5:47PM
Hey guize, I have insider information about the ragnaros encounter.
You'll be fighting with Malfurion Stormrage and a platoon of Sentinels and druids, who have brought a massive supply of moonwells, just in case there's a use for them. You need to keep Ragnaros busy until Malfurion thinks of "an idea". Then, in phase 2, you have to kite Ragnaros towards the moonwells, while the druids and sentinels position them into a massive circle, leaving a gap in the circle of moonwells large enough for Ragnaros to go through. That's phase 2 over. Then, you have to battle Ragnaros, along with his elemental minions, in the center of the massive circle, while the accompanying elves complete the circle, and then reinforce it with even more moonwells, as well as preparing them (the moonwells) for the task they are to perform. Then, when you get him down to 10% health, you've won. the druids all gather round the moonwell circles, and keep entangling roots up on you, while you all gtfoutta there. Then-
KABLOOIE!!!
Well, yes, that.
Coik May 8th 2010 11:44PM
Hamuul Runetotem: Oh noes! Ragnaros is attacking the World Tree!
Malfurion: I have a cunning pl-
*Malfurion is dogpiled by every human, dwarf, gnome, night elf, draenei, worgen, orc, troll, tauren, blood elf and goblin in the area*
zweitblom May 9th 2010 3:17AM
I have a dawning terrible suspicion who came up with the Mohawk Grenade idea...
Blayze May 9th 2010 4:38AM
Powered by Moonwell Energy Solutions!
For when you absolutely, positively gotta wreck every tree you claim to protect.
Glassneedles May 8th 2010 5:11PM
Any reason why you didn't mention events that happened in Stormrage? Surely the revelations about Fandral(sorry if that has spoilt the book for anyone) will shake up night elf society not to mention the ending which I won't mention for spoilers.
Anne Stickney May 8th 2010 5:21PM
Because this is part one. Part two, that will be addressed.
F. Somalia May 8th 2010 6:50PM
NEED PARTE TWO !!11!
Phantom May 8th 2010 5:15PM
Am I the only one who see the Alliance as a bad pug and the Night Elves are the dumb ones who keep messing up aggroing,causing the deaths of a fellow members,killing things that they were told NOT to do, etc.
Eregos ftw! May 8th 2010 5:20PM
As a loyal Night Elf, I am offended. We are a highly civilized people, and we will not stand for this. Those drunken dwarves that we are forced to be allies with are the problem!
Angrycelt May 8th 2010 5:25PM
Same could be said of the horde. Got your good tank in the orcs, their solid backup of heals and dps with tauren and trolls. Then the damned belf shows up in his RP gear and the forsaken vanishes and lets the rest of the party wipe so he can loot the bodies while everyone does their corpse run.
Grass ain't always greener, pal.