Know Your Lore: Grommash Hellscream, Page 2

The long doldrums
Grom saw none of the first or second wars against the humans of Stormwind or the Alliance of Lordaeron. He spent the entirety of that conflict trapped on Draenor, forced to endure the slow deterioration of his world, the wasting death of his clan due to starvation on a planet that could not feed them. As you might expect, Grom was not one to sit back and endure such a fate quietly. The elder shaman Ner'zhul found in Grom an enthusiastic participant for a plan to save the orcs of Draenor following the failure of the invasion of Azeroth.
Reopening the Dark Portal, Ner'zhul sent Grom and other orc chieftains on raids to discover various magical artifacts, as well as an attempt to destroy Nethergarde Keep. For his part, Grom welcomed the chance to finally face the humans in battle. In the end, however, Grommash Hellscream was far more canny (and inherently disobedient) than Ner'zhul could have anticipated. He led his Warsong through the human ranks and even through the Dark Portal itself, even as Ner'zhul destroyed Draenor. While the portals ripped the home world of the orcs apart and scattered its fragments throughout the twisted nether (the largest known fragment becoming the Outland), Grom and his people found themselves trapped on a world where his kind were feared, hated and ultimately defeated.
Grom spent the next years leading his Warsong away from being captured by the humans. In the chaos following the wars, the Warsong managed to hide in the wilderness at the edges of the Eastern Kingdoms. Hunted and hounded by Alliance forces, the Warsong remained free at any costs, while Grommash found himself forced to ruminate on how his people had gone from a proud nomadic society, to a blood-crazed mob, to a shattered, demoralized people huddled in human camps, watched over by human guards, barely able to move their heads from their laps. Amazingly, in a moment of introspection rare to him, Grom realized that much of the blame for the sorry state of the orcs was entirely his. When the son of Durotan, named Thrall by the humans, came to find the Warsong Grom eventually allowed him to stay with them for a while and learn the orc language, and the two orcs eventually became close enough for Thrall to call Grommash "big brother." Still, Thrall's presence endangered the Warsong, as the human commander Aedelas Blackmoore sought to recapture his prize gladiator at all costs, so Grom pointed Thrall in the direction of the Frostwolves, after recognizing a scrap of cloth the young orc held as belonging to that clan's standard.
Grommash brought the Warsong to bear alongside Thrall when the young orc enlisted the titular warchief Doomhammer in an attempt to free the orcs from the internment camps. Doomhammer had nothing good to say about Hellscream (calling him a demon haunted dreamer), but it didn't impede their combat prowess any. However, Doomhammer fell on the battlefield at Hammerfall (so named for its being the site of his death; before that, it had been merely another internment camp). Thrall became Warchief with Grom's full support. Grommash knew himself well enough to know that while he could lead his Warsong, he was not suited to overall command of the entirety of the new Horde, as it required someone with a vision all orcs could rally around. Thrall was that orc.
Kalimdor and the death of the wood god
Grom managed to get himself captured by the humans and had to be freed by Thrall, just prior to the Warchief's decision to obey dreams and visitations from the reborn Medivh and take the orcs west to Kalimdor. Stealing ships from a Lordaeron distracted by the rising plague of undeath, they sailed into the Maelstrom, where they encountered the Darkspear tribe and the Sea Witch, then finally shipwrecked on the coast of Kalimdor. By this time, Grom was beginning to become discontented, unable to understand why Thrall was insisting on the course of action on which they'd embarked. Even with a Warchief he considered like a brother, Grom disliked taking orders and was a stubborn, contrary orc. It's also probably that the subtle presence of the Burning Legion was having an effect on him. After disobeying Thrall and murdering a pack of humans in the Stonetalon area, Grom found himself set to a supposedly safe, menial task. He was to gather lumber for the Horde in the forests to the north of Stonetalon.
This led to a whole host of unfortunate circumstances, some of which were Grom's fault and some which were wholly out of his control. The night elves, outraged by the orcs' clearcutting in their forests, attacked them; soon, the demigod Cenarius joined the fight. When Grom tried to convince Cenarius that the orcs were no longer servants of the Burning Legion, the demigod found their protests unconvincing due to the lingering demonic taint on them, and the orcs found that their weapons were unable to strike at Cenarius effectively. Pressed to the brink by the power of the woodland god, Grom next found himself presented with a choice. His witch doctors detected a powerful font of magical energies nearby and led Grom to it, only to grow aghast at the demonic taint swelling in it. Now, it's true that Grom could have simply led his forces in retreat at this point. Many would probably have died, but it's unlikely that they would have followed them further into Stonetalon. Even if Cenarius and the night elves had chosen that course of action, Grom would have had Thrall, their new troll and tauren allies, and the rest of the orcs to assist him.
But Grom was an orc of action. He was not a tactician who led by considering acceptable losses and used complicated strategies and feints. Grom led by example. Grom fought in the front lines. And in the end, Grom's blood sang with the power it had never felt since the day he drank from the demon's blood. Against his witch doctor's advice, he did what he knew Thrall would never countenance rather than have to face a defeat. Grom drank from the demon blood in the tainted fountain and ordered his orcs to do likewise, and Grom led their blood-crazed forces into direct combat with Cenarius.
Grommash Hellscream, Giant's Heart, slew the god of the wood and found himself again a slave to Mannoroth. The demon taunted Grom that he had placed his blood in the fountain intending just this outcome and announced that the orcs would never escape their slavery to him and the demons of the Burning Legion.
So ends a demon
Thrall proved that he really did consider Grommash his brother by leading both his own forces and those of the freshly allied humans under Jaina Proudmoore to capture Grom, after he'd again fallen under Mannoroth's sway as a chaos orc (more clearly tainted than most orcs but less so than a pure fel orc, lacking their bony spikes and massive maws but sharing their red skin). In a powerful ritual, Thrall freed him from Mannoroth's control.
Enraged beyond reason at having again led orcs under his command into demon slavery, Grommash went with Thrall to the wilds of Ashenvale, where they both knew Mannoroth lurked. Thrall struck the first blow, hurling the Doomhammer itself at the pit lord, but Mannoroth shrugged off both the attack and the young shaman and turned his full attention to Grom. Again the demon lord taunted him, saying that the fury in Grom's heart proved that they were akin: "The boy believed you could be saved. But he didn't know, what burns within your soul.When in your heart, you know we are the same!"
Mannoroth's words proved to be the final gall to the soul of the proud, easily angered, guilt-haunted orc warrior. He'd led his people into the depths of madness and addiction, failed them again when entrusted to lead them on a simple mission, and he knew himself to be ultimately responsible for their endless pain and susceptibility to the fel monsters of the Legion. In one burst of fury, Grommash Hellscream flung himself forward, driving Gorehowl into the breast of the pit lord and slicing him open with a wound so great that Mannoroth's very burning heart exploded.
Grommash stood in the center of that explosion.
As Thrall ran to his friend's side, Grommash's burning red eyes slowly dimmed. The last exchange between shaman and warrior has come to define Hellscream's legacy in the modern Horde.
Warcraft III - The Death of Hellscream
It may be impossible for anyone but an orc to understand what this moment means to them. Yes, they admit, Hellscream's hand was the one to first lift the goblet; Hellscream was the first to drink. Hellscream struggled with the blood curse every day of his life from that moment on. It's impossible to argue that no one would have drunk if not for Hellscream, however. Someone was likely to -- if not Hellscream, possibly Blackhand or Deadeye or Bladefist. But what is not disputable is that Hellscream ended the curse when even Thrall failed. If it was the hand of Hellscream that doomed them, then too it was the hand of Hellscream that saved them.
Hellscream serves as a cautionary tale and yet as an example of the orcish heart and its true power. Orcs learn from Hellscream to never allow their rage to overwhelm them, but also to trust in that rage when the time for action is at hand.
It is impossible for the modern orcish heart to reject Hellscream. He was their most savage, their most reckless, their bravest, their most impetuous, their most daring, their most contrary. He was the worst of them. He was the best of them. Every orc, somewhere in his or her heart, knows the fire that drove Hellscream every moment of his life and to his death. He was not their most noble soul. He was not their most intelligent soul, their best warleader. He was not the one who saw clearly the danger to their souls and rejected it. He wallowed in it and only overcame it by facing what he himself was, and had been, and had done.
He lived for his people and he died for his people.
Next week, the legacy of Hellscream strides onto the stage.
Grom saw none of the first or second wars against the humans of Stormwind or the Alliance of Lordaeron. He spent the entirety of that conflict trapped on Draenor, forced to endure the slow deterioration of his world, the wasting death of his clan due to starvation on a planet that could not feed them. As you might expect, Grom was not one to sit back and endure such a fate quietly. The elder shaman Ner'zhul found in Grom an enthusiastic participant for a plan to save the orcs of Draenor following the failure of the invasion of Azeroth.
Reopening the Dark Portal, Ner'zhul sent Grom and other orc chieftains on raids to discover various magical artifacts, as well as an attempt to destroy Nethergarde Keep. For his part, Grom welcomed the chance to finally face the humans in battle. In the end, however, Grommash Hellscream was far more canny (and inherently disobedient) than Ner'zhul could have anticipated. He led his Warsong through the human ranks and even through the Dark Portal itself, even as Ner'zhul destroyed Draenor. While the portals ripped the home world of the orcs apart and scattered its fragments throughout the twisted nether (the largest known fragment becoming the Outland), Grom and his people found themselves trapped on a world where his kind were feared, hated and ultimately defeated.
Grom spent the next years leading his Warsong away from being captured by the humans. In the chaos following the wars, the Warsong managed to hide in the wilderness at the edges of the Eastern Kingdoms. Hunted and hounded by Alliance forces, the Warsong remained free at any costs, while Grommash found himself forced to ruminate on how his people had gone from a proud nomadic society, to a blood-crazed mob, to a shattered, demoralized people huddled in human camps, watched over by human guards, barely able to move their heads from their laps. Amazingly, in a moment of introspection rare to him, Grom realized that much of the blame for the sorry state of the orcs was entirely his. When the son of Durotan, named Thrall by the humans, came to find the Warsong Grom eventually allowed him to stay with them for a while and learn the orc language, and the two orcs eventually became close enough for Thrall to call Grommash "big brother." Still, Thrall's presence endangered the Warsong, as the human commander Aedelas Blackmoore sought to recapture his prize gladiator at all costs, so Grom pointed Thrall in the direction of the Frostwolves, after recognizing a scrap of cloth the young orc held as belonging to that clan's standard.
Grommash brought the Warsong to bear alongside Thrall when the young orc enlisted the titular warchief Doomhammer in an attempt to free the orcs from the internment camps. Doomhammer had nothing good to say about Hellscream (calling him a demon haunted dreamer), but it didn't impede their combat prowess any. However, Doomhammer fell on the battlefield at Hammerfall (so named for its being the site of his death; before that, it had been merely another internment camp). Thrall became Warchief with Grom's full support. Grommash knew himself well enough to know that while he could lead his Warsong, he was not suited to overall command of the entirety of the new Horde, as it required someone with a vision all orcs could rally around. Thrall was that orc.
Kalimdor and the death of the wood god
Grom managed to get himself captured by the humans and had to be freed by Thrall, just prior to the Warchief's decision to obey dreams and visitations from the reborn Medivh and take the orcs west to Kalimdor. Stealing ships from a Lordaeron distracted by the rising plague of undeath, they sailed into the Maelstrom, where they encountered the Darkspear tribe and the Sea Witch, then finally shipwrecked on the coast of Kalimdor. By this time, Grom was beginning to become discontented, unable to understand why Thrall was insisting on the course of action on which they'd embarked. Even with a Warchief he considered like a brother, Grom disliked taking orders and was a stubborn, contrary orc. It's also probably that the subtle presence of the Burning Legion was having an effect on him. After disobeying Thrall and murdering a pack of humans in the Stonetalon area, Grom found himself set to a supposedly safe, menial task. He was to gather lumber for the Horde in the forests to the north of Stonetalon.
This led to a whole host of unfortunate circumstances, some of which were Grom's fault and some which were wholly out of his control. The night elves, outraged by the orcs' clearcutting in their forests, attacked them; soon, the demigod Cenarius joined the fight. When Grom tried to convince Cenarius that the orcs were no longer servants of the Burning Legion, the demigod found their protests unconvincing due to the lingering demonic taint on them, and the orcs found that their weapons were unable to strike at Cenarius effectively. Pressed to the brink by the power of the woodland god, Grom next found himself presented with a choice. His witch doctors detected a powerful font of magical energies nearby and led Grom to it, only to grow aghast at the demonic taint swelling in it. Now, it's true that Grom could have simply led his forces in retreat at this point. Many would probably have died, but it's unlikely that they would have followed them further into Stonetalon. Even if Cenarius and the night elves had chosen that course of action, Grom would have had Thrall, their new troll and tauren allies, and the rest of the orcs to assist him.
But Grom was an orc of action. He was not a tactician who led by considering acceptable losses and used complicated strategies and feints. Grom led by example. Grom fought in the front lines. And in the end, Grom's blood sang with the power it had never felt since the day he drank from the demon's blood. Against his witch doctor's advice, he did what he knew Thrall would never countenance rather than have to face a defeat. Grom drank from the demon blood in the tainted fountain and ordered his orcs to do likewise, and Grom led their blood-crazed forces into direct combat with Cenarius.
Grommash Hellscream, Giant's Heart, slew the god of the wood and found himself again a slave to Mannoroth. The demon taunted Grom that he had placed his blood in the fountain intending just this outcome and announced that the orcs would never escape their slavery to him and the demons of the Burning Legion.
So ends a demon
Thrall proved that he really did consider Grommash his brother by leading both his own forces and those of the freshly allied humans under Jaina Proudmoore to capture Grom, after he'd again fallen under Mannoroth's sway as a chaos orc (more clearly tainted than most orcs but less so than a pure fel orc, lacking their bony spikes and massive maws but sharing their red skin). In a powerful ritual, Thrall freed him from Mannoroth's control.
Enraged beyond reason at having again led orcs under his command into demon slavery, Grommash went with Thrall to the wilds of Ashenvale, where they both knew Mannoroth lurked. Thrall struck the first blow, hurling the Doomhammer itself at the pit lord, but Mannoroth shrugged off both the attack and the young shaman and turned his full attention to Grom. Again the demon lord taunted him, saying that the fury in Grom's heart proved that they were akin: "The boy believed you could be saved. But he didn't know, what burns within your soul.When in your heart, you know we are the same!"
Mannoroth's words proved to be the final gall to the soul of the proud, easily angered, guilt-haunted orc warrior. He'd led his people into the depths of madness and addiction, failed them again when entrusted to lead them on a simple mission, and he knew himself to be ultimately responsible for their endless pain and susceptibility to the fel monsters of the Legion. In one burst of fury, Grommash Hellscream flung himself forward, driving Gorehowl into the breast of the pit lord and slicing him open with a wound so great that Mannoroth's very burning heart exploded.
Grommash stood in the center of that explosion.
As Thrall ran to his friend's side, Grommash's burning red eyes slowly dimmed. The last exchange between shaman and warrior has come to define Hellscream's legacy in the modern Horde.
Warcraft III - The Death of HellscreamGrommash: Thrall, the blood haze has lifted. The demon's fire has burned out in my veins. I ... have ... freed ... myself.
Thrall: No, old friend. You've freed us all.
Thrall: No, old friend. You've freed us all.
It may be impossible for anyone but an orc to understand what this moment means to them. Yes, they admit, Hellscream's hand was the one to first lift the goblet; Hellscream was the first to drink. Hellscream struggled with the blood curse every day of his life from that moment on. It's impossible to argue that no one would have drunk if not for Hellscream, however. Someone was likely to -- if not Hellscream, possibly Blackhand or Deadeye or Bladefist. But what is not disputable is that Hellscream ended the curse when even Thrall failed. If it was the hand of Hellscream that doomed them, then too it was the hand of Hellscream that saved them.
Hellscream serves as a cautionary tale and yet as an example of the orcish heart and its true power. Orcs learn from Hellscream to never allow their rage to overwhelm them, but also to trust in that rage when the time for action is at hand.
It is impossible for the modern orcish heart to reject Hellscream. He was their most savage, their most reckless, their bravest, their most impetuous, their most daring, their most contrary. He was the worst of them. He was the best of them. Every orc, somewhere in his or her heart, knows the fire that drove Hellscream every moment of his life and to his death. He was not their most noble soul. He was not their most intelligent soul, their best warleader. He was not the one who saw clearly the danger to their souls and rejected it. He wallowed in it and only overcame it by facing what he himself was, and had been, and had done.
He lived for his people and he died for his people.
Next week, the legacy of Hellscream strides onto the stage.
While you don't need to have played the previous Warcraft games to enjoy World of Warcraft, a little history goes a long way toward making the game a lot more fun. Dig into even more of the lore and history behind the World of Warcraft in WoW.com's Guide to Warcraft Lore.
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Reader Comments (Page 3 of 5)
Brian Jason Eland Aug 25th 2010 4:25PM
Rossi, you should be writing the WoW books, in my opinion. Fantastic writing, very evocative.
Langhorne Aug 25th 2010 7:06PM
Hell yes. Infinitely better than the current book authors. I can't stomach the prose in the books, but I love these articles.
Murdertime Aug 25th 2010 5:50PM
I think Grom Hellscream is exactly why Thrall sees Garrosh as a positive thing for the orcs.
Garrosh is pretty much his father.
Thrall knows what dealing with Grom was like.
Grom and Garrosh are pretty much both fantastic to have round in the abstract.
They're both exceptionally powerful, brave and honorable warriors with the spark of greatness in them, that can serve to an inspiration to the orcish people.
That's in the abstract. If you're the average orc on the street, who doesn't have to hang around them all the time.
If you have to deal with them personally, on the other hand, you also realise that, in addition to their many positive qualities, they are both have tendency to be loud opinionated assholes who want to hit you with an axe. In the face.
Does anyone remember Grom from WC3? Cause Garrosh seems like an ocean of calm next to the the dude even before he drunk the Demon Juice.
Blayze Aug 25th 2010 7:03PM
I don't remember Garrosh ever being powerful -- at least, not until *after* Thrall picks him as his successor. And unless you're a time traveller or pretty good at detecting these things and passing off lucky guesses as proof that you know something other people don't, you don't get to claim information from the future as the reason for anything.
From what I've seen, the only time he fights anyone or anything is when Thrall punks him in the arena -- which means all we can glean is that he's weaker than Thrall. That's not hard, though, Thrall's a Shaman. He can call up earthquakes when he has to, and bring a flying necropolis crashing down to earth.
As for him being brave and honourable... again, we haven't seen him do *anything* before becoming the Warchief. Not that it matters, though. The first time he comes up against a problem he can't break with his axe or bare hands, he's going to get punked again. It's like Saurfang said -- what was Garrosh going to do; rage at Icecrown Citadel until it fell apart?
The least he could have done when Thrall made the mistake of bringing him with him to talk about an alliance (Seriously, Thrall. You should know by now that Garrosh and diplomacy don't mix. It's almost like he wants to ruin his chances at peace...) was snap Rhonin's neck like a twig and demanded the Kirin Tor get Dalaran destroyed for the twenty-seventh time by inserting it at speed into the Citadel.
I wonder if that whole "can only be killed at the source of his power" thing for Arthas includes pancaking into a hideous crushed lump of flesh, bone and metal when he hits the ground after falling from his open-topped Citadel?
And then there's the issue of Garrosh changing from emo to berserker between Nagrand and Borean Tundra, then yet again as we go into Cataclysm. Even if he was simply trying to emulate what he knew of Grom from Thrall's little magic puppet show, there should be *some* indication or subtle hints that that's the case.
As it stands now, Garrosh's character in Wrath looks like Blizzard either retconned the terrified villager he was in Nagrand out of existence, or he's somehow done a complete 180 with his personality and has no traces left of who he once was -- which implies (According to me) terrible writing attempting to shoehorn him into the position of Resident Horde Warmonger-in-Chief ready for Cataclysm.
Artificial Aug 26th 2010 1:40AM
@Blayze: You couldn't be more wrong. There is more than just some indication of that, and it's not at all subtle. Far from leaving no traces, that memory of what Garrosh once was explains who he is today, and why he acts the way he does. As extreme a personality as he displays can only be explained by that kind of fear inside him, and an overwhelming need to prove to everyone and most of all himself that it's behind him. It's like the extremely religious man with the terribly sinful past, the more horrid they were before, the more pious they are now. That may be somewhat cliched, but it's not bad writing, as that sort of thing is realistic, it happens all too often in real life...
fudge Aug 25th 2010 6:02PM
Grom Hellscream is actually one of the reasons why peace between the Alliance and the Horde is nigh impossible to achieve, despite Thrall's many attempts: The orcs revere the cold-blooded slaughterer of countless Draenei, Humans, Night Elves and even a Demigod as one of their saviours. Very interesting character, but certainly not helpful regarding inter-faction relations.
Dreyja Aug 25th 2010 6:37PM
Yep. As long as he's venerated it's a bit hard for anyone that lived through that slaughter to understand where Thrall is coming from.
I love Thrall but the Grom worship is still a puzzle to me, even after this masterfully written article.
Jenks Aug 25th 2010 11:56PM
Cenarius and every single Night Elf that Grom killed deserved to die. Murdering because someone cuts a few trees down isn't cool, as far as I'm concerned.
Artificial Aug 26th 2010 2:20AM
This, I find, is not credible. As a general rule, no one really cares *that* much what place a historical figure holds in your heart. The Alliance would not suddenly declare a love-fest with the Horde if the orcs just said, "Grom? Meh..." Mostly they just wouldn't know, much less care, what the average orc thinks of Grom Hellscream.
Ask a Frenchman what he thinks of Napoleon sometime. The answer might be fascinating, but I doubt it would constitute an insurmountable barrier to declaring peace with France, no matter how extreme or widespread the opinion was.
Natsumi Aug 26th 2010 5:53AM
@Artificial
That would actually require talking to someone from France, which would violate intellectual statute 1347-2B, which is Do not speak to those that find Jerry Lewis funny. Or was it Thou shall not speak to those that smell of elderberries. Either way, I'm sure it applies to the French. :D
Also, it's not what the average Orc thinks (which is not very much, btw), it's what THE LEADER OF THE ENTIRE HORDE (aka Thrall) THINKS. THRALL is the one with the bromance for Grom. That is the issue the Alliance has about the Grommash love fest. As far as the Alliance is concerned the Average orc can sit in an internment camp for the rest of their lives. Well, not Gilneas, they want the orcs to die now as opposed to later, honestly I don't care as long as they are dead. :)
Vengeance for Lothar! Vengeance for Cenarius! Vengeance for Lordaeron! FOR THE ALLIANCE!
fudge Aug 26th 2010 6:10AM
@Jenks
First of all, the Night Elves see the trees as their companions, the orcs were therefore chopping down their buddies. Let's see your reaction to someone killing your friends. Secondly, this is the equivalent of a foreign army invading your country and start pillaging your resources. Would you be cool with a bunch of blood crazed Canadians stealing your stuff and laying waste to your strip malls? I don't think so.
@Artificial
Napoleon's been dead for a long time. Of course the French don't feel as strongly about him. And even during his times, Napoleon was widely recognized even among his enemies. Goethe once famously supported the emperor. Therefore, not a good comparison to Grom Hellscream.
Kurrick Aug 25th 2010 6:27PM
"No brother, you have freed us all"
-Thrall
Natsumi Aug 26th 2010 5:55AM
From the shackles you placed on us so long ago.
-How it should have ended IMHO
Dreyja Aug 25th 2010 6:34PM
Wow... I kind of wish someone would put this kind of passion into writing about an alliance character. I wish BLIZZ would put this kind of passion into an Alliance character. X)
I'm not criticizing, this was beautiful Rossi - VERY.
I'll never see Grom the way you do but I'm in awe of your writing skills. :)
Matthew Rossi Aug 25th 2010 6:57PM
To be honest, I'm probably going to do Lothar at some point even though we already have a Lothar post, because Lothar is simply my favorite Warcraft character, period.
Dreyja Aug 25th 2010 7:08PM
That is great to hear, you just made my week. XD Lothar deserves your abilities, definitely. :)
Natsumi Aug 26th 2010 5:56AM
FOR LOTHAR! FOR LORDAERON! FOR THE ALLIANCE!
Grovinofdarkhour Aug 26th 2010 3:58PM
Any chance we might someday see a piece on Terenas Menethil II, Last True King of Lordaeron?
Krem Aug 25th 2010 7:14PM
Lok'tar ogar, Hellscream! May the Warsong never fade!
*tearful salute*
Vonmises Aug 25th 2010 7:35PM
"Orcs learn from Hellscream to never allow their rage to overwhelm them, but also to trust in that rage when the time for action is at hand. "
I want a horde where the orcs let their rage overwhelm them. Who is with me?