Know Your Lore: Orgrim Doomhammer, part 1

He is the father of the modern Horde. His name became the name of the great city built by the orcs. He found in the son of his oldest friend a protegé who would lead his people, and he passed his family's greatest treasure down to ensure that prophecy was satisfied. To his people, he was one who never forsook them. No attempts to run away from the consequences of their actions, no dissembling -- simply forthright, pragmatic action. Alone of the Blackrock Clan, he refused the taint of the demon blood, yet found himself marked by it as it spread through his people. Called the Backstabber because he killed his direct superior, Blackhand the Destroyer, he ruled the Horde until its final defeat at Blackrock Mountain.
To his enemies, he was death. He beheaded his own chieftain and seized power in one brutal moment, crushing any opposition by the swift assassination of his enemies.He destroyed Stormwind and nearly brought down Lordaeron. He killed the majority of the warlocks of the Shadow Council and removed the position of Warchief from the role of a puppet ruler, leading the Horde in truth. He asked for no quarter and gave none. He countenanced the capture and forced breeding of the dragon queen Alexstrasza and her consort Tyranastrasz, using the juvenile dragons as mounts. He allowed Gul'dan to live, even though he suspected treachery, because the old warlock promised him a weapon that could counter the magics of the humans. He was never one to put his conscience ahead of what he saw as his duty; even as he suspected the orcs were being lied to and manipulated, he took part in the slaughter of the draenei. In the end, his own pragmatism cost him the victory in the Second War, as the treacherous Gul'dan proved that placing victory above all sometimes means giving someone too much rope -- Gul'dan's betrayal of the Horde in its moment of victory effectively destroyed all of the hard work of its Warchief.
Orgrim Doomhammer, last of the Doomhammer line, Warchief of the Horde, chief of the Blackrock, was an orc, give him all in all. You shall not look upon his like again.
Before the Horde
The greatest strength of Orgrim was also his ultimate weakness: his ruthlessly pragmatic nature. A brilliant tactician and skilled warrior, Doomhammer did not particularly care for the self-examination that marked the character of his best friend and rival, Durotan of the Frostwolves. Doomhammer was not a chieftain. He was not born to rule his people, but to serve them as a descendant of the Doomhammer line, gifted for generations with the honor of carrying the weapon from which they took their name. Orgrim's father, Telkar, wielded the hammer as one of the greatest warriors of the Blackrock Clan in the time before the shaman Ner'zhul first began warning the tribes of the draenei threat. Upon Telkar's death, Orgrim assumed his role in the Blackrock Clan and proved himself every bit a Doomhammer, quickly rising to an honored position as second in command to the Blackrock chief Blackhand.
Orgrim first met Durotan at a Kosh'harg festival, and the two young orcs settled into a friendly competition that became an unusual friendship, stretching as it did across clan lines. There was no rule against this, primarily because orcish society as a whole at that time had few hard-and-fast rules at all, being decentralized and nomadic -- but it was not traditional. Still, neither young orc ever broke from this friendship, renewing it at subsequent Kosh'hargs and whenever they had the chance to meet. It was this friendly rivalry that led the two youngsters to encounter the draenei, led by the warrior Restalaan (the draenei patrol helped the two orcs against an ogre), and this meeting led to an encounter with Velen, prophet of the draenei. If Velen foresaw that these two young orcs would someday help butcher his people, he gave no sign of it, receiving them warmly and spending time conversing with them about their people and the ancient prophecy of the Doomhammer itself.
Despite this cordial reception, in later years, as Ner'zhul's warnings became urgent and the various clans of the orcs became suspicious of the draenei, Orgrim ultimately made war on the draenei. While at first he merely followed the lead of his chieftain Blackhand, in truth Orgrim enjoyed the war and began to relish the opportunity to prove himself in a far more dangerous way than the contests in which he and Durotan used to engage. While he suspected both Ner'zhul and later Gul'dan of deceiving and manipulating the orcish people, unlike his friend Durotan, he didn't question the rightness of his own actions nearly so much, accepting the orders of his clan chief. It's also possible that despite his role as second in command, Doomhammer felt somewhat uncertain in his position. Not only was his friendship with Durotan unusual, his connections with the Thunderlord clan may have made him somewhat of an outsider in the Blackrock, despite being heir to the Doomhammer.
What followed was a battle of wills between the warlock who pulled the puppet's strings and the warrior who sought to cut them. Gul'dan sought the ultimate power for himself, while Doomhammer had no particular interest in power at all. He fought in the war against the draenei because it was his duty, but also because he found that he enjoyed battle and was talented at it. The aggrandizement he sought came from this long-held need to prove himself via contest, and war provided him with the ultimate chance to do exactly that. He sought to be the first among equals and could not abide the role of puppet Warchief accepted by the boorish Blackhand.

Rise of the Warchief
Following the destruction of the draenei, the orcs began a slow decline as their world became too corrupted by the fel magics of the warlocks to support life. It's clear that watching his people's slow death affected Doomhammer deeply, as all of his actions to follow were aimed primarily at securing a future for them at any cost to anyone else. Following Blackhand to Azeroth, Doomhammer watched in dismay as his Warchief Blackhand managed to quickly lose control of the invasion and was even driven back to the swamps surrounding the Dark Portal by the armies of the native people of Azeroth, these "humans." While Gul'dan didn't really care -- he'd only invaded Azeroth in the first place in order to try and trick Medivh into revealing the location of the Tomb of Sargeras -- Doomhammer quickly grew incensed at what he saw as poor leadership by Blackhand and selfish, power-hungry manipulations by the warlocks of the Shadow Council who used Blackhand as a puppet.
By this point, any scales remaining had fallen from Doomhammer's eyes. He knew the war with the draenei had been a sham and that the invasion of Azeroth was, as well. Given the choice between dying on a blasted, dead world corrupted by Gul'dan and his sycophants, or murdering every last man, woman and child in the Kingdom of Stormwind, he took the latter option. But make no mistake; Doomhammer would be no orc's puppet. As soon as Gul'dan was distracted by events (specifically, Khadgar and Lothar's raid on Karazhan that ended Medivh's life, as Gul'dan took the opportunity to try and ransack Medivh's distracted mind and got blasted into a coma for his troubles), Doomhammer struck. He beheaded his Warchief and seized total control over the Horde. As soon as Garona returned from her mission to assassinate King Llane Wrynn, he seized her, too, and tortured her until she told him where the leadership of the Shadow Council was hiding.
Then he killed as many of them as he could get his hands on. When Gul'dan awoke, he was presented with a fait accompli. Blackhand was dead, as were the majority of his warlocks. Doomhammer fully intended to kill him, too. It's a testimony to Gul'dan's skill at saving his own green behind that he managed to convince Doomhammer not to kill him -- but it's also a testimony to Doomhammer's ruthless pragmatism. He was embroiled in a war on an alien world that was, so far as he knew, the only chance for his people to survive. He'd managed to destroy Stormwind, but the humans of that kingdom had retreated to the unknown north, leaving Doomhammer in command of a military with no idea what lay ahead of it and nothing to retreat to on Draenor. Simply put, he didn't have a lot of options at this point. He had to move fast to take advantage of the momentary triumph, and to do that, he needed magic. With shamanism effectively dead, it was warlocks or nothing.
So Gul'dan created the first death knights out of the corpses of fallen Stormwind knights and his own slain warlock followers, and Doomhammer prepared to lead the Horde -- his Horde, at last -- to its destiny in the lands of the north, what the humans called Lordaeron.
Next week, we'll discuss the Second War, which could well be called Doomhammer's War, and how he came within hours of conquering the Alliance. Then we discuss the fulfillment of prophecy and how the Doomhammer came to leave the hands of the Doomhammer line. Doomhammer was large; he contained multitudes.
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 Insider's Guide to Warcraft Lore.Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Lore, Know your Lore
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 4)
EteNew Sep 22nd 2010 9:13PM
True, though to not quite put Grommash and Doomhammer in the same camp as each other; Doomhammer didn't have any choice left when he ascended to power. It was victory or death. While resources are limited and times are tough with Cataclysm, Thrall to his credit has/had set up a world where diplomacy between the Horde and Alliance could actually be sort of civil before Grommash decided to piss all over foreign relations.
It wasn't like diplomacy was on the table for Doomhammer since he couldn't just go, "Sorry humans about screwing up your kingdom, warlocks did it. We'll just go back to where we came from and you don't have to worry about us. Even though we're going to die by returning to where we came from."
It's like a starving man and a wild animal. The Horde had to kill the Alliance at this point or be faced with starvation/mauling.
Dreyja Sep 22nd 2010 10:28PM
Sorry I'll never buy the whole, "we have no choice now but to wipe the humans out completely," thing. That is why he'll never be a character I'll respect but he's still ahead of Grom in my books.
Dreyja Sep 22nd 2010 10:29PM
There's always an option other than genocide. ALWAYS.
Eternauta Sep 23rd 2010 2:03AM
I'm kinda tired of these typical alliance self-righteous arguments.
You can't judge medieval fantasy societies' actions in times of war by our peacetime modern real world standards.
And sometimes there aren't any other options to genocide. Think World War II: What about Hiroshima and Nagasaki?
Hurbster Sep 23rd 2010 2:19AM
Good job the 'sef-righteous Alliance' didn't take the same attitude or no internment camps for you ! Just death.
Artificial Sep 23rd 2010 3:18AM
@Dreyja: There are two extreme positions you can have regarding Doomhammer: You can have complete respect for him, or you can have no respect for him. Both of these positions are absurd. In truth, these is much to respect in him, and much to revile. No account of his story can do justice to him without noting both.
Zelius Sep 23rd 2010 6:23AM
@Eternauta
Excuse me, but are you actually condoning the use of nuclear weapons against Japan? Just because that particular act of genocide ended the conflict, does not mean there wasn't any other way.
arawn.chernobog Sep 23rd 2010 6:49AM
@Alliance members going "Horde is evhul and genocidal"
- Alliance Interment Camps (Orc Slaves yay!);
- Alliance Murdering truckloads of Forest Trolls because the High Elves (Who were invading the Troll homelands, btw) wanted a little peace and quiet in "their home";
- Dalaran wizards know that their magic usage is attracting the Legion, instead of giving up magic, like they were advised to, they prefer to empower one human as a guardian to fight off the demons... effectively allowing for the eventual corruption of Medhiv and EVERYTHING demon-related to happen on Azeroth during and after the 2nd War;
- Placing Garithos anywhere near a position of command (This one is added half-comically, but geez who had the bright idea of leaving this schmuck as a backup plan?);
- Night Elves (though not traditionally Alliance) can be traced as being the origin of every disaster in Azeroth.
Not to bash Alliance/condone Horde, but let's keep the "You is evil" arguments out of discussing the moral compasses of each faction/faction's hero. And the article states quite well why Doomhammer proceeded with genocide:
"Given the choice between dying on a blasted, dead world corrupted by Gul'dan and his sycophants, or murdering every last man, woman and child in the Kingdom of Stormwind, he took the latter"
Were there other options? Perhaps, but at the eyes of Doomhammer it was death to his people or death to Stormwind, many of us would probably have done the same.
Eisengel Sep 23rd 2010 7:20AM
@Zelius
Actually, yes. Sadly, the dropping of the atomic bombs probably saved a lot of lives.
The war in the Pacific was pretty terrible. There were a lot of casualties on both sides and the Japanese fought mercilessly, hanging on to every inch of land as long as they could. Even when entirely surrounded they often would fight until they were killed or captured, trying to inflict as much damage as they could.
There was a land invasion of the Japanese mainland planned. The Japanese were low on men and materiel, so they were going to mobilize their entire population. The elderly, women, children, armed with bamboo stakes, to charge the American Army. The US Army's best estimates were over a million civilian deaths to establish a foothold. Not to take Japan, just to cement a landing.
Instead of going through with that - the US used the atomic bombs, vaporizing entire cities in an instant. It was a wretched, horrible thing, but the Japanese had nothing to fight. There was no enemy to shoot or stab, just a plane carrying one bomb at a time. They could either surrender, or risk being systematically wiped off the face of the Earth, one city at a time, by an enemy they could not stop or strike back at. The Japanese were willing to fight to the last man, woman and child, but saw the utter futility in being exterminated from a distance.
It was a dirty, terrible thing, but the dropping of those bombs likely saved a lot of lives.
Even so, the atomic bombs did not result in the greatest loss of life. Read about the firebombing of Tokyo and other Japanese cities.
Mir Sep 23rd 2010 10:25AM
If you think that the US actions towards Japan in WW2 were genocide you really need to invest in a dictionary.
StClair Sep 23rd 2010 1:49PM
As Eisengel notes, the alternative to dropping the A-bombs on Japan was LITERAL genocide - as in, "the Japanese cease to exist as a race" - with similarly staggering casualties on the other side.
The destruction wrought by the bombs was not that much greater than had already been inflicted on many, many cities with "conventional" weapons. It was the show of power (which still resonates in the popular imagination, decades later) involved in doing it with ONE bomb each. (It was also something of a bluff, in that the US didn't have any more bombs at the time - but of course, the Japanese didn't know that.)
Yes, it's horrible. It's war. That's what we play at, with this game.
Dreyja Sep 23rd 2010 6:18PM
@ Artificial - Oh hey I totally agree. In fact, I respected the Doomhammer I met in, "Lord of the Clans." The trouble is, I read that one before I read, "The Rise of the Horde," or " Tides of Darkness." The Doomhammer of those books nauseated me because I'd formed a picture of him that fit Thrall's view of him, sadly.
I don't revile him but he's no hero in my view. Yeah, genocide is genocide and to assume he had no other option at that point is just as simplistic.
I doubt any of you will see this reply but I had to try anyhoo. :)
There are a few characters I have a true loathing for, right now, the only one "alive," is Sylvanas. That doesn't mean that I don't have some sympathy for what happened to her. In fact, I think giving her a clean death at this point would be a mercy.
So what I'm saying is that even if somone states a view with some passion it doesn't necisarrily mean their oppinion is neciarily shallow and without nuance. I have seen you say similar things about Alliance actions/characters so let's keep it in perspective here.
/respect.
The Japan correlation is completely off topic (well stated but doesn't speak to genocide), sorry. Doomie had no goal other than to COMPLETELY wipe the humans out as a species. That’s a HUGE difference from making the tough choice about how many lives to sacrifice for the greater good.
"The only defensible war is a war of defense." - Chesterton
Dreyja Sep 23rd 2010 6:42PM
@ Eternauta, actually some of us are familiar with history, the good and the bad of it as well. I'm curious what you would have us measure our experience of the game by? War, in the real world, brings out the absolute worst in our species. It also brings out some of the best. Look at that same story of WWII and you’ll see people who risked everything to hide Jews, smuggle fallen soldiers and who stood up and said, THIS IS WRONG.
Retrospect can be bias in both ways. How would you have someone interact with the story if they admire the people who went to prison because they said, NO, more than those that made the call to drop the bomb. Sure, lives were saved (still not an apt corollary IMH) but there is a place for the other kind of hero as well.
Just sayin. Your argument has it’s own self-righteous tones. We are supposed to admire the butchers of history, all of them? Sorry, that doesnèt fly.
Luke Sep 22nd 2010 9:32PM
I'm glad to know that he lived up to the name Doomhammer.
Was this KYL short on purpose? Meaning does the majority of his story revolve around the Second War?
Sword Sep 22nd 2010 10:39PM
You are really a good writer Mr. Rossi. I really enjoy coming here and reading your articles, each one seems better than the last.
Thank you for what you do.
Grovinofdarkhour Sep 22nd 2010 11:39PM
Is that the Cheshire Cat? Meeee-ow!
Rude Hero Sep 22nd 2010 11:51PM
If you really want to believe that warcraft is about shades of gray, you have to accept this character for what he is.
It's funny to me that, as of Warcraft II, Doomhammer was basically the nicest, most honorable orc in the entire lore... but as the lore has evolved (for the better, mind you) he's ended up at the opposite end of the spectrum!
He did wrong, but did his best, no excuses. He didn't drink demon blood, so he doesn't even have that blanket excuse! I have to say, World of Warcraft is supposedly all about shades of gray, and while I have high hopes for cataclysm, up until now those shades of grey have been 98% on the lighter end of that spectrum.
*(minus the grand apothecary society, but they're technically not representative, sort of like the human Garithos.)
Artificial Sep 23rd 2010 3:07AM
Blizzard likes tragic heroes.
Murdertime Sep 23rd 2010 4:58AM
The thing about Doomhammer is that he had won the second war. The Alliance was on the ropes. All he needed was to finsh them at that point. But he chose to kill defeat Gul'dans army instead.
It was Orgrim choosing to stop a monster (or wreak bloodthirsty vengance, depending on your point of view), killing half his own army in the process, that allowed the alliance the breathing space it needed to stop the orcs
DragonFireKai Sep 23rd 2010 6:14AM
Actually, WCII paints Doomhammer as a treacherous backstabber, who slays blackhand to sieze control of the horde, and whose campaign culminates with the cowardly ambush and murder of Anduin Lothar under the auspice of peace talks. Make no bones about it, there was absolutely nothing nice, nothing good, and nothing redeemable about the horde in WCII.
However, his story, along with that of the horde in general was significantly retconned in WCIII, and the later books, rise of the horde and Tides of Darkness. He was rewritten to be less Adolf Hitler, and more Ghengis Khan. Still an unrepentant mass murderer, but at least he's straightforward and honest now, rather than comically evil.