Know Your Lore: The Old Gods part three -- Yogg-Saron

To pick up a thread from our original Old God post, we now have a name for the entity that may or may not be an Old God in the Twilight Highlands (and I'm gambling that it is): Isorath. This demotes Soggoth the Slitherer to "really, really powerful servant" status, but it's worth keeping in mind that Great Cthulhu himself was not an Elder God, merely a Great Old One, and perhaps we're about to discover a similar division in Warcraft's lore. We now almost surely know the names of three Old Gods; it's too soon to call.
However, that's for the future. This week, we turn our eyes to The Beast With A Thousand Maws. Tremble before the God of Death! If you've run Ulduar, you've probably run into the handsome fellow above, who dwells therein. Its blood is power, its thoughts madness; few can resist the power of the lucid dream.
We discussed the basics of the Old God/Titan conflict in previous posts, but to give a general overview, it can help to visualize them as two opposing ideologies. The Old Gods like everything to be a roiling, disorganized mess. They gleefully enslave and direct elementals into pitched combat for no other reason than their own amusement. They keep worlds they infest at a constant tipping point, neither letting them be destroyed utterly nor ever allowing any kind of permanent order to be established. The Titans, on the other hand, absolutely love order. They can't get enough of it. They go around the cosmos constantly imposing it on every planet they can get their hands on.
You can see why these two groups didn't get along. In the smackdown between the cosmic Felix Ungers and the cthonic Oscar Madisons, it turned out that the Titans are not being played by Tony Randall. Despite the enormous, sanity-shattering power of the Old Gods, the Titans just wanted it more (and have a fair amount of enormous power themselves), and in the end, they and their servitors prevailed over the Old Gods and their armies of enslaved elementals, elemental lords and sinister servants like Soggoth. Save for one Old God who managed to fight a Titan to a standstill (at least according to his autobiography, the Prophecies of C'Thun), the other Old Gods were bound up in the world they'd infested and left to rot by their Titan enemies, due to a general belief that it would take destroying the entire planet to get rid of them.
Not that the Titans were entirely unwilling to go that far, but they figured they'd give containment a shot first.
In the eons before the Sundering, Azeroth was blessed with one continent, Kalimdor. At the center of that great continent stood the Well of Eternity, created by the Titans for some great unspecified purpose and imbued with the ability to draw mystical power directly from the depths of the Great Dark Beyond. (The Great Dark Beyond is basically the black void of space surrounding Azeroth and other worlds, as opposed to the Twisting Nether, a place of demons and other fel intelligences where the ruined remains of Outland currently reside.) On this ancient continent, the Titans left behind many structures, facilities built to shepherd Azeroth and its development. Some were also built as prisons. One such facility was the enormous city-complex known today as Ulduar. And within Ulduar, chained at its very heart with chains made of pure cosmic matter, lay the dread Yogg-Saron.
The dread Yogg-Saron
Unlike C'Thun, Yogg-Saron appears to have named itself. If not, no records remain to tell us who named it. Also unlike its peer, Yogg-Saron seems to have given itself a portfolio of sorts, declaring itself to be the Old God of Death. Trapped without recourse to the Well of Eternity, Yogg-Saron seemed to have slept in confinement for countless eons.
"Seemed" is the operative word there, because the beast with a thousand maws was anything but quiescent during its durance vile in Ulduar. We don't as yet know how much of what Yogg-Saron shows those who oppose it is truly accurate and how much the beast itself has to do with those visions, but we do know that it is possible and even likely that Yogg-Saron was one of the Old Gods who helped to corrupt Deathwing. (Indeed, given his title of The Lucid Dream, Yogg would seem a very likely candidate.) Yogg-Saron's display of the events of the formation of the Dragon Soul (later known as the Demon Soul) certainly indicates that he either has or claims a level of involvement with the madness that overcame Neltharion.
It's also telling, however, that Yogg-Saron displays the murder of King Llane Wrynn at the hands of Garon Halforcen. We know that Garona was acting on the orders of the Shadow Council, who had used their warlock magics to condition her over the years. We know that Gul'dan, leader of the Shadow Council, had used warlock magic to age and dominate Garona's mind and had entrusted the ogre mage Cho'gall, his own creation, with the task of controlling her. And we know that Cho'gall again attempted to use his power over Garona to help bring C'Thun back to life. So why did Yogg-Saron show us Garona's murder of the human king who had trusted and respected her? Was he claiming to have had control over Cho'gall even then? Is that why we find Twilight's Hammer soldiers and mages in Ulduar serving General Vezax? Just how deep do Yogg-Saron's machinations go?
The third vision we see, that of Arthas Menethil (the Lich King) torturing Bolvar Fordragon (his eventual replacement), is fairly simple: Arthas had made extensive use of Yogg-Saron's own blood for his undead minions. Yogg-Saron's words -- "He will learn that no king rules forever" -- proved prophetic indeed, as Arthas died at the hands of me and 24 of my closest friends. (Well, OK, maybe you killed him. Depends on who raids when.) At any rate, Arthas was slain, Bolvar took up the mantle of the Lich King, and we're left to wonder why Yogg-Saron -- who claimed such extensive influence, helping to cause the creation of the Demon Soul (and inadvertently the Sundering itself), the death of King Llane and destruction of Stormwind, and the ultimate fate of the Lich King -- was so unprepared for his own death.
Then again, when we look at the circumstances surrounding Ulduar, we're forced to wonder if it was unpreparedness.

Over the course of the millennia, Yogg-Saron enslaved the will of Loken, the Prime Designate charged with watching over the Ulduar installation and Azeroth entire. Using Loken as a proxy, Yogg-Saron manipulated the servants of its own Titan enemies, engaging them in a long and ultimately pointless war that ended with many of them being forced into stasis by Loken and thus unable to interfere with the corrupted watcher's plans for Azeroth. Loken went so far as to murder his brother Thorim's wife Sif and pin the blame on the servants of Hodir, another of his sibling watchers. Eventually, Freya, Hodir and Mimiron all found themselves imprisoned and slowly driven mad by the being they themselves had been set to ward over. The last watcher besides brooding Thorim was Tyr, a great champion of order who'd sacrificed his own hand in battle with the forces of the Old Gods. His fate remains unknown. There's speculation that Yogg-Saron used the corrupting force of his saronite blood to alter Tyr into General Vezax, but no evidence either way as yet.
Eventually, as great heroes from the mortal races reached the Storm Peaks in their quest to find a way to halt the Lich King's advances, Yogg-Saron used Loken to manipulate and capture Thorim, the final watcher of Ulduar with a component of the Algalon fail-safe. It's unknown why neither Loken nor Tyr had a piece of the device, perhaps as a check on these two supposedly most orderly of the watchers to keep them from summoning Algalon prematurely. With Thorim in his reach, Yogg either failed to keep a close enough watch on his servitor or deliberately sacrificed Loken to vengeful heroes in order to activate the Algalon protocol.
Because how else could it have happened? It's clear that Yogg-Saron must have known of the protocol after thousands of years of controlling Loken even more thoroughly than Deathwing has even been controlled. (Neltharion, for all his flaws, has never blindly obeyed the Old Gods, working with them only when it suits him.) Why would Yogg-Saron, the Old God of Death, the Lucid Dream itself, allow Loken to die alone in a side wing of the Ulduar complex if it didn't exactly suit his plans? Look at the larger picture.
As with C'Thun, we see an Old God confronted and slain in its own lair by mortal hands, when the Titans themselves supposedly could not do so without destroying Azeroth. Perhaps the issue isn't that the Old Gods can't be slain, but that to slay them utterly requires the complete eradication of Azeroth back down to its primary unmixed materials (as Algalon himself implies when he arrives) -- and therefore, Yogg-Saron can't possibly be dead now. I don't know about you, but when I killed him, I didn't reduce Azeroth to its primary components just to be sure. However, in manipulating a group of mortals to not only kill Loken but then to storm Ulduar, regain the fragments of the Celestial Planetarium key, and take a key role in preventing Algalon himself from reoriginating Azeroth, Yogg-Saron ensures its own survival and the survival of the Old Gods.

It's not that Yogg-Saron particularly wants Azeroth to survive, but the Old Gods have shown a remarkable tendency to enjoy their own existences. Allowing Algalon to wipe Azeroth down to the raw cosmic matter that formed it and root out the slumbering and presumably vulnerable Old Gods trapped within wouldn't suit the Old God of Death at all, since it happens to be one of those selfsame trapped beings. But look now: Not only has Yogg-Saron slain, corrupted or weakened his eternal jailors, it has convinced them and Algalon that it has been destroyed and is no longer a threat. Furthermore, even if clear and present evidence of even more widespread systemic Old God corruption of Azeroth should surface, Algalon's not coming back to deal with it.
Azeroth belongs to the Old Gods now. While there have been a handful of mortals who have shown the ability to balk them, these same mortals run the risk of corruption every time they raise a weapon against the Old Gods. Just ask Milhouse Manastorm about the insidious whispers of the madness that crawls behind reality's mask. Can mortal heroes who have accepted the Faustian bargain and worn the very blood of an Old God possibly hope to retain their sanity and battle a hopeless fight against forces that threaten to swallow the world in chaos, and do so without the help of the Titans?
Sure, Yogg-Saron is dead. Of course it is. The alternative ... that events unfolded exactly as it hoped they would ... is too horrible to contemplate.
Next week, the new lore of the Old Gods in Cataclysm.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Lore, Know your Lore, Wrath of the Lich King, Cataclysm
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Reader Comments (Page 5 of 5)
Moeru Aug 12th 2010 10:12AM
I've never read much into the mythos you're speaking of, but Blizzard has a habit of combining many different aspects together from different sources.
Again, I just like the idea of one giant organism parasite feeding on the minds of the mortal races and on the soil beneath them.
It could also explain why you can't kill them, as you're just disabling parts of the whole.
theRaptor Aug 12th 2010 3:33AM
My theory in regards to Loken's death is that it was a subtle betrayal on the part of Loken who couldn't openly resist Yogg'saron but could allow himself to be killed so that Algalon would come along and see the corruption of the Old Gods. It is a common element in stories involving mind control/body snatching.
I think it makes more sense than Yogg calling down Algalon so that mortals could try and stop him.
Eldoron Aug 12th 2010 6:50AM
This article was TFH too? It looks like one.. less speculation plz!
terraburn Aug 12th 2010 9:35AM
This was a very wordy post. (meaning lots of synonyms for other words than I'm used to seeing in your posts). I don't know if you were feeling poetic or what but I liked it :)
So a couple of things to play with.
Firstly, we already know Blizzard has no problem telling us what we do in game is not Warcraft canon. According to Metzen and crew, King Wrynn killed Onyxia, not us as adventurers. It's completely reasonable to assume that in any type of future printed stories, it will be told that Tyr returned to free his brothers and sister and fought back Yogg-Saron. Or any number of reasonable explanations.
The other thing to play with, in relation to why we were able to slay C'thun and Yogg-Saron, is that we as mortals have become far more powerful than any Titan or Old God could have imagined. Our skills and control over the powers at hand have allowed us to grow to a great strength and thus providing us the opportunity to do things the Titans could not. It may seem arrogant to assume we are that strong but it stands to reason that we may actually be.
Great post as always :)
Ruck Aug 12th 2010 8:53AM
Felix Unger? Oscar Madison? Tony Randall? WHO???
I enjoyed the article but as one of the of many thousands of non-US readers, I didn't understand the reference. What might seem common knowledge in the USA is an obscure unknown cultural reference to the majority of the planet. I would prefer not to have to do an extensive wiki bio check just to comprehend an article fully.
When I post on a forum with an international readership I don't name-check minor local celebrities and avoid making reference to things people outside my small part of the world would understand. I'd appreciate it if the article writers here did the same.
And incidentally, before I get rabid foaming-at-the-mouth feedback, this isn't an America bashing post. I'm pointing out that the whole world is reading and would like to understand too. Thankyou.
Freedom Town Aug 12th 2010 10:45AM
It is called being well-read, and learned. it has nothing to do with "small, cultural references". Give me a break.
Matthew Rossi Aug 12th 2010 4:48PM
"When I post on a forum with an international readership I don't name-check minor local celebrities and avoid making reference to things people outside my small part of the world would understand. I'd appreciate it if the article writers here did the same."
Is the Odd Couple (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Odd_Couple) reference really that much of a deal breaker for you? You can't read this post because you don't know who Tony Randall (an international celebrity with decades of stage and movie work) is? - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Randall
It's kind of an example of your bias that you focused so intensely on these minor references and acted as though they were monstrously obscure when they were about a play/television series that's won numerous Tony awards. Am I allowed to know that? Is it that disruptive for your reading enjoyment if I, as an example, mention something by Tom Stoppard?
I don't really understand what you want out of me here. I can strip my posts of any references you might not get, I suppose, but it's impossible for me to know exactly what you do and don't know about. Wouldn't it be better to assume you're even better informed than I am?
Arann Aug 12th 2010 5:08PM
Yeah, it's awfully rude to expect you to go out of your way--all the way to your computer or phone--to open a browser and Google something if you didn't happen to understand it.
Oh, wait.
Jormund Fenris Aug 12th 2010 10:29AM
Isorath, huh?
Not that I'm an expert on Lovecraftian lore, but sounds marginally like Shiggurath to me.
The black face in the woods with a thousand noses is upon us.
CDave Aug 12th 2010 8:22PM
I disagree; Yogg could actually be dead. Because players (or at least all the Azerothian-based ones) are technically part of the corruption of the Old Gods that kept the Titans from destroying them, maybe that gives us alone the ability to kill them for good. If we players kill them, we still carry that corruption and so may still be able to hold the world together with our presence.
Wulfkin Aug 13th 2010 3:47AM
Once again, it's spelt CHTHONIC.
Sorry to be picky (again) but if you're going to use the word in every Old Gods article, please spell it right.