Know Your Lore: Stormrage and the Emerald Nightmare, part 1

The events playing out in game right now have long-lasting repercussions on future lore, but there are also events playing out that aren't present in game. The Shattering by Christie Golden details some of these events, but there's another book out there that also has an effect in upcoming events. I'm talking about Stormrage by Richard A. Knaak, which was released earlier this year and covered information regarding the Emerald Nightmare.
Even though the book was released some time ago, the effects of the book haven't been felt. This is because as far as timelines go, Stormrage hadn't really happened yet -- or has it? The book takes place somewhere between Wrath of the Lich King and Cataclysm, and though we don't see any of the events in the book played out in game, we see players from the book and the repercussions of the book's events. Today, we're going to give an overview of what's in the book and how it affects what's going to play out in Cataclysm.
Please note: The following post is all about Stormrage and contains spoilers for the majority of the novel as well as the upcoming Cataclysm expansion. If you're planning on picking up the book, turn away now, lest ye be spoiled for eternity!
While the timeline for Stormrage isn't exactly defined, what we do know about events leading up to the book can all be found in game. The dark manifestation of the Emerald Nightmare has been plaguing the Emerald Dream since vanilla WoW. Horde players first see evidence of this in the Wailing Caverns instance, where the druid Naralex and his followers have been corrupted, which is why the Druids of the Fang and their home are hostile to all players. Alliance players may enter the Wailing Caverns as well; however, most Alliance avoided the instance, as it was in the heart of Horde leveling territory and thus way, way out of the way to get to.

Players noted a distinct lack of Malfurion Stormrage in World of Warcraft -- and the addition of a new faction leader of sorts, Arch Druid Fandral Staghelm. Fandral was caustic and rude to any players leveling through the zone, and when players questioned where exactly Malfurion had disappeared to, it was revealed that he was deep in slumber in the Emerald Dream, fighting the Emerald Nightmare.
The Nightmare's effect reached Ysera's four most trusted advisors -- Lethon, Emeriss, Taerar, and Ysondre -- corrupting the four dragons and unleashing them on Azeroth in Patch 1.8.0. Players who defeated the dragons and retrieved the Nightmare-Engulfed Object were treated to a rare glimpse of Malfurion Stormrage:
In the events leading up to Patch 1.9.0: The Gates of Ahn'Quiraj, players attempted to retrieve three shards, red, blue, and green, to form the Scepter of the Shifting Sands. The green shard was in the hands of Eranikus -- and Eranikus had to be redeemed and freed of the Emerald Nightmare's corruption before the shard could be turned over. After his redemption, courtesy of Tyrande Whisperwind, Eranikus vanished, presumably to return to the Dream.Malfurion Stormrage: Remulos, old friend. It is good to see you once more. I knew this message would find its way to you -- one way or another.
Keeper Remulos: It was shrouded in nightmares, Malfurion. What is happening in the Dream? What could cause such atrocities?
Malfurion Stormrage: I fear for the worst, old friend. Within the Dream we fight a new foe, born of an ancient evil. Ysera's ancient brood has fallen victim to the old whisperings. It seems as though the Nightmare has broken through the realm and seeks a new host on Azeroth.

Meanwhile in Darnassus, Tyrande Whisperwind had her own nightmare. See, during all these years in World of Warcraft, Malfurion had been sleeping in the Emerald Dream, his body safely hidden away. But that body of Malfurion's had been slowly deteriorating, and Tyrande's priestesses were the only things that were keeping that body alive. In Tyrande's vision, Malfurion's body continued to decay and warp, turning into a ghastly tree, leaves fluttering in the wind. When Tyrande awoke from her vision, she knew what was going on -- Malfurion was dying, and even her best priestesses couldn't stop it from happening.
In between this were the druids of the Cenarion Circle and Fandral Staghelm. Two of these druids, Broll Bearmantle and Hammul Runetotem, played heavy parts in the events to come. Essentially, what happened is that Fandral called together a convocation of the druids because Teldrassil was failing. This, too, we've seen in game; anyone who has leveled a night elf can see evidence of Teldrassil's corruption all throughout the starting zones. Fandral decided to do something about this by having the strongest druids of the order come together and feed their powers into strengthening the failing World Tree.

Broll, meanwhile, had his own disturbing visions -- visions of Azeroth, trying to warn him of some impending doom, and of the evil that still lurked in the Idol of Remulos. When Hamuul suggested that Broll pass on this information to the Cenarion Circle, Broll politely declined, suggesting Fandral might think him completely mad.
All over the rest of Azeroth, more people experienced visions. The entire city of Goldshire fell, its citizens refusing to wake up from their nightmares. The same went for Auberdine in Darkshore. More and more were falling to the Nightmare, including faction leaders. Thrall was engulfed in it, Sylvanas was captured in it -- and while Varian Wrynn managed to avoid it, his son Anduin fell prey to it.
Tyrande's plan was simple: She needed to get to Malfurion, and in order to do so, she needed to get into the Emerald Dream. Fandral wasn't really willing to help her, so that night in secret, she asked for Broll's help instead. Broll managed to steal the Idol of Remulos out from under Staghelm in order to use its powers to find Malfurion. With the help of Broll Bearmantle and the mysterious Idol of Remulos, she found her way to one of the portals. But Tyrande wasn't the only one seeking entrance into the Dream; Thura, niece of Broxigar, was still hunting Malfurion.

Meanwhile in Azeroth, more cities were falling into cursed slumber, and a strange mist loomed threateningly over the world. Varian Wrynn noticed that the mist seemed to contain figures -- figures that appeared as loved ones and friends to those viewing them. To Varian, the landscape was cluttered with clones of his son Anduin and his beloved wife Tiffin, who'd died many years before. There was no fighting the mist. It advanced over the Eastern Kingdoms, it crawled over Kalimdor, and as the few that were still awake watched in horror, it seemed as though nothing would stop it. Oddly, there was one place unaffected by it at all.
Teldrassil.
Come back tomorrow for the conclusion of the Nightmare war, it's implications, and why exactly you are responsible for the mysterious absence of Malfurion Stormrage.
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: Lore, Know your Lore
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 5)
Drack Nov 13th 2010 8:57PM
From my understanding, that's not the best of ideas. To quote another commenter:
"Metzen's Tyrande: 'I am a warrior of the Night, I will do whatever it takes for my people and to preserve the land... even if it means the unthinkable! No sacrifice is too great!'
WoW's Tyrande: *bounce bounce*
Knaak's Tyrande:'Hey Malfy sweetie, Me and Ysera baked a cake for my big-strong hubby! When you come back from saving the world maybe we could snuggle!'"*
So, yeah...
KNAAAAAAAAAAAK!!!!!!
*Note: Took me a good 15 minutes to track down that quote :p
Cetha Nov 13th 2010 9:50PM
Thanks for the warning. Any suggestions on where to get some good Tyrande?
Drack Nov 13th 2010 10:41PM
In the line of reading material, I have no idea, Wowwiki has a fair article on her, though. Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos has a Night Elf campaign with a focus on her, too.
Sorry, for the short list, but that's all I can think of, hope it helps.
Shadda Nov 14th 2010 1:39AM
Even in Warcraft III, Tyrande was only a driving force while Malfurion wasn't around. After that she just squabbled with Maiev and got captured by Illidan. For whatever reason, Malfurion's character seems overprotective of Tyrande. It's often Malfurion who marginalises her role in things or tries to keep her safely out of the action. It's evident in Warcraft III, but maybe less apparent in Knaak's books where Tyrande seems more willing to go along with his wishes.
That said, I enjoyed Stormrage. It's probably my favourite of Knaak's books.
Akycha Nov 14th 2010 12:10PM
@Drack Having actually read the book I have to disagree with that quote.
Tyrande was cool and kicked ass. She was a major mover and shaker in the book and she certainly wasn't meak and an airhead. Yea, she was back up and support while Malfurion did his Druid thing and saved the world at the end, but she's a warrior and priestess not a druid. Besides if she hadn't been there to support him, Malfurion wouldn't have been able to do his thing to save the world.
I don't understand why people think a woman can't be strong, confident and independent while at the same time being supportive and feminine. Being supportive and caring doesn't turn you into a piece of fluff. And believe me the Tyrande in Stormrage isn't waiting at home cooking cake. She's out there dragging Malfurion's ass out of the mess he got himself into.
Definitely read the book for your Tyrande fix. I did. :D
arawn.chernobog Nov 14th 2010 6:27PM
@Drack
Oh, nice to see I'm reaching quote status, and not just quote status... it's "Oh crap, that reminds me of that thing that guy said ages ago, let me burn my personal time to search for it" quote status.
To be fair must of that was due to my adoration of the Warcraft 3 "savage warrior" female Night Elven society and Tyrande being the icon of it, when contrasted against her weak presentation in WoW and the novel.
*bounce, bounce*
brian Nov 13th 2010 8:34PM
It wouldn't be so bad if Knaak actually spent more time building upon the existing characters rather than making fan-fictiony new characters.
Remember, he was the reason we actually have Dragonflights. However, it's because these are based on existing characters rather than being completely made up that they're cool.
poggg Nov 13th 2010 11:09PM
Agreed. What Knaak needs is a co-author or something to keep him in check - he does some good things, he just needs to be more...regulated.
Sal Nov 14th 2010 2:51AM
Knaak isn't allowed to make up random/new characters. Blizzard decide all those stuff, along with storyline etc., and hand it off to Knaak, Blame Blizzard.
brian Nov 14th 2010 4:22AM
That's true, but why does it end up that the vast majority of books that have brand new (and author-avatar) characters are written by Knaak?
Jiffah Nov 14th 2010 6:49AM
I do believe the writers are given some space to play. For what I heard, Blizzard usually knows what the book should be about, around which aspect of the lore/timeline it revolves and how it ends. They then ask the writer to come up with a short treatment and if it's a go then some meetings for approval along the way. If Blizzard knew everything that should be happening in those books, they would write all of them and not commission the majority of them.
Jamz Nov 13th 2010 8:38PM
I GOT SO PISSED WHEN I READ WHAT ***** WAS DOING WITH THE *********** WE WERE MAKING FROM THE **** OF **'**** *****!!!!!!! I HAVE REFUSED TO DO THIS QUEST FROM THE DAUGHTER OF HAMUUL!
Oh crap....forgot to bleep that out >.
Kagato Nov 13th 2010 8:54PM
So with the cleansing of the Emerald Dream does this mean we will never see it in game as it should be seen... if so I feel cheated.
Jamz Nov 13th 2010 9:15PM
the Nightmare still exists...the Dream is no longer a part of it
Revynn Nov 13th 2010 11:14PM
It was explicitly stated at Blizzcon this year that we will see the Emerald Dream/Nightmare in-game. How much of it and to what extent was unclear and sounded undecided (it could be anything from a CoT 5-man to a quest hub to an entire content patch, likely not a full expansion though), but it will happen.
Suzaku Nov 14th 2010 12:27AM
The Emerald Nightmare wasn't cleansed so much as it was contained. It was flushed out of the Emerald Dream and into the Rift of Aln, which by all indications is either the Rift in the Maelstrom or its dreamform.
I think a big part of why they did Stormrage was to bring Malfurion and other key druid figures back into the picture, in anticipation of the Cataclysm expansion and specifically the Mount Hyjal zone. Not so much to deal with the Emerald Nightmare definitively.
At Blizzcon, they revealed that the creator of the Emerald Nightmare is an Old God named N'Zoth. They also confirmed that the Emerald Dream and Nightmare would both be returning, when the time was right for them to tackle the content.
Without giving too much away, hints in Cataclysm and elsewhere potentially indicate that N'Zoth may be behind not only the Emerald Nightmare, but the mutation of the highborne into naga as well.
Spencer Nov 13th 2010 9:09PM
Read the book, it was terrible.
Just... terrible...
Jamz Nov 13th 2010 9:16PM
is it only terrible because Knaak wrote it? I've read terrible books and this one is not one of them
Joseph Smith Nov 14th 2010 9:42AM
@ Jamz:
Pretty much.
You see, the fans love to say how horrible Knaak's work is, and how you shouldn't buy it and read it. Then when a new Knaak book comes out they rush out on day one to purchase it so they can be the first to read it and say how much they didn't like it.
It's understandable. After all Rhonin is the biggest Mary Sue in Warcraft History. You know he took down C'Thun, right? Also defeated Kel'Thuzad, Took down Onyxia and Nefarion, delivered the Ashbringer to Tirion Fordring, and took down the Lich King. And that's just the start of what he's done.
Seriously, I find that the best way for people to complain if they don't like his writing isn't to post "KNAAAAAAAAAAAAACK" in comments on a website, but to simply not buy it. I'm not a fan of Twilight, so i don't buy Stephanie Meyer's books then read them so i can complain about it. Same goes for any form of art. You don't like it, nobody forces you to buy it.
Kylenne Nov 14th 2010 3:44PM
@Joseph Smith: Except the tired "don't like, don't read" fanboy defense fails miserably and is bullshit when it comes to Warcraft novels. The Twilight series isn't supplemental reading for a massive MMORPG, they're standalone books. When Blizzard deliberately farms out major plot developments in the MMO to novels and comics, you don't have a fucking choice but to read them if you want to understand what's going on in the game.
Prime example: Obsidian Sanctum. Not a quest, not a five man dungeon, but a *raid* that has literally no lore or information on it whatsoever in the actual game it's in. If you want to know WHY you and 9-24 of your closest friends have to go in there and kill Sartharion, you have to read a book to do so. Other examples: Who the hell is Dar'khan Drathir and why does he have a Scourge camp in Ghostlands? Who the hell is this blue dragon in Magister's Terrace and who's this human girl at the Sunwell? For that matter, what's the deal with Lor'themar Theron and Halduron Brightwing? (hint: you will find next to none of these answers in the actual game, you have to read the Sunwell manga if you want a clue). Then there's Varian Wrynn: I see his label is "King of Stormwind" but where the hell was he all this time and why is he hanging out with a Blood Elf? (Questions I saw asked many, many times by a ton of baffled people during the pre-Wrath events, because the answers are only found in the comics). Who is this shaman chick bossing Thrall around in Nagrand right now? (Something you wouldn't know unless you read The Shattering.) And this sort of thing happens over and over again as time goes on. It'll get even worse when Cataclysm drops and a legion of baffled Tauren players see Baine in place of Cairne in Thunder Bluff.
The problem is, even if you stick with the *good* WC writers, you're going to have gaps that leave you confused. I purposefully avoided Stormrage because I despise Knaak's 14 year old DBZ fanboy writing style (War of the Ancients and the Sunwell Trilogy was quite enough for me), but The Shattering makes several references to the Nightmare War. Nothing major, but enough to leave someone who hasn't read Stormrage or a summary confused. This isn't like Star Wars fandom anymore, where you can watch the movies and have a clue what's going on. Expanded Universe materials are quickly becoming mandatory reading if you want any sort of information on the game's story. So, no, "don't like, don't read" doesn't work here. Sorry.