Shifting Perspectives: Why (or why not) to play a worgen druid

Today, we're going to tackle the subject of worgen druids, whose lore is an even bigger rat's nest than the contentious subject we discussed last week. As a note on that, I feel obligated to stick to the official line, which is that night elves were the first druids. Read Xarantaur's flavor text again. Not only does he skirt the issue, but his own story is an oblique confirmation that he probably wasn't among the first druids if the Warcraft RPG's information on racial lifespans is still canon.
Malfurion Stormrage is a young adult by the War of the Ancients. Xarantaur references the War, the Sundering, and a lengthy period spent traveling Kalimdor in search of stories. He was about to die when he was gifted with immortality by Nozdormu, so it's probable that he, too, was a young adult when the War began. By night elf reckoning, a "young adult" (even before the immortality granted by the World Tree) is between 100 and 300 years old; a tauren with a vastly shorter natural lifespan would be between 30 and 50. Even allowing for the smallest natural age gap, Malfurion predates Xarantaur by at least 50 years, and probably a lot more, given that he and a host of other night elf druids enter Ysera's service in the Emerald Dream after the Sundering. While it's likely that the tauren weren't taught druidism long after the night elves, Blizzard's official line is that night elves were the first druids. They may retcon this in the future or at the very least clarify (and I hope they do), but Xarantaur's existence doesn't conflict with the idea of night elves being first.
The full series is available here:
- Shifting Perspectives: Why (or why not) to play a night elf druid
- Shifting Perspectives: Why (or why not) to play a tauren druid
- Shifting Perspectives: Why (or why not) to play a worgen druid
- Shifting Perspectives: Why (or why not) to play a troll druid
Considering the worgen
Random factsYou wouldn't like me when I'm angry.
- Goblins and worgen have heavily phased starting areas that are functionally gone once you've leveled through them. For goblins, the Isle of Kezan and the Lost Isles are literally inaccessible once you've left; for worgen, Gilneas still exists but is emptied of NPCs and services. You can go there to enjoy a truly beautiful zone and architecture, but that's it.
- Since worgen will be a new race in Cataclysm, there are no figures (official or otherwise) on their popularity yet. As you'd expect of any new race, they've been extremely popular on the beta, but how this will translate to the live servers is anyone's guess.
- Gilneas has been in the Warcraft storyline since the beginning but sat out the Third War and subsequent events due to a disagreement with the Alliance. After the Second War, Lordaeron wanted to tax fellow Alliance nations to support the series of internment camps built to house the orcs. Genn Greymane had a difference of opinion concerning the issue, said an effective "up yours" to the rest of the Alliance, had the Greymane Wall built ... and Gilneas has been a mystery ever since. If Greymane could've shoved the peninsula off from the mainland, he would have.
OK, you might need more reason to play them than that. The Gilneans are an interesting (though odd) bunch who have only recently reappeared in the world. What took me aback while questing through both the starting area and the revamped Alliance zones is how very normal they are. It's a vivid reminder that they're still humans, despite the curse. They think like humans, act like humans, and reason like humans -- until suddenly they're not so human. From the little old lady in the starting area who claws a Forsaken down to Sven Yorgen choking the hapless Jitters in Duskwood, the wolf is never far from the surface.
If you like playing a human -- with their messy politics, adaptability, and fundamental good-heartedness -- then playing a worgen is like playing a cooler-looking version of them with better toys and a kickass starting area. As a druid, you're assumed to be a follower of the "old ways" -- people who wield a simple kind of nature-based magic that helped Gilneans raise sufficient crops during their time of seclusion. Naturally, there's a lot of potential history there you could work with. There's also a marvelous built-in roleplay device in Two Forms, allowing an enterprising player to spend peaceful pursuits as a human and violent pursuits as a giant, rabid werewolf. Even if you don't plan on playing a worgen, try to play through the starting area at least once. While players are divided as to whether it or the goblin starting experience is better, nearly everyone agrees that the story of Gilneas' fall is done very well and worth seeing.
Concerning in-game matters, worgen are by far the best-rendered models among all four druidic races in Cataclysm, with the most fluid and interesting animations. To be frank, they make night elves, tauren, and trolls all look terrible by comparison.
Why you might not want to play one Gilneans are similar to night elves in a few unsettling respects. Both races have been relatively cloistered and tend toward insular viewpoints, bordering on arrogance. A Gilnean will have had no news of, or interaction with, the outside world for a long time. He's likely to have about as accurate a perspective on world events as your average North Korean and is unlikely to put Gilneas' sufferings in proper context. (Gilneas has had it bad, but other people -- blood elves, gnomes, the draenei, and Lordaeron come to mind -- have had it way worse.)
Gilneas was also one of the more powerful and stable members of the Alliance before the Wall was built, and her people aren't accustomed to being in a position of weakness. Without spoiling too much, you don't spend the starting area scoring many victories; even the biggest triumph is at best a tactical retreat. It remains to be seen what effect this has on the surviving nation, but there's no denying it's a humiliating blow.
While you'll find worgen among quest givers in the world, they're still less common than other races who have only recently appeared on the scene. The tauren, introduced to the world, take an active interest in its affairs, but a worgen's primary concern is still the welfare of Gilnean citizens. The Forsaken may have destroyed the Greymane Wall, but the average Gilnean's still got one built in his head.
On a note concerning player psychology and the general appeal of new races, expect to see a lot of worgen rolled after Cataclysm hits. If you like uncrowded leveling areas or playing less common races, you'll want to steer clear of worgen for a while. Also, while Blizzard has hugely decreased the incidence of the annoying snuffling idle sound, it's still around.
Allie's take I've played through the worgen starting area four times and am still at a loss to explain what the hell's going on with the worgen "curse." Questions over the Druids of the Pack, how their condition became a curse, and why it spread to the Gilneans is something that's only fuzzily answered (if you think it's answered at all). It's like watching Scientologists set up a branch office somewhere and their belief system infecting the local countryside with a fever of a hundred and werewolf. Frankly, it doesn't really make much sense, but when you have the opportunity to play a werewolf, you have to be willing to let a few niceties slide in the interest of more coolness.
Otherwise, I have fallen in love with the female worgen in particular. Blizzard spent a lot of time on this model, and it shows. While it's true that their faces are still a bit chihuahua-esque rather than lupine, you can minimize the effect with certain face options, and their animations are so cool that it's giving me serious pause over whether to play feral or not. On a completely random note, the female worgen rogue's stealth animation also marks the reappearance of the very cool old "gliding stealth" that has largely disappeared from the game.
Racial attributes
- Aberration This has been tinkered with a bit; it used to be decreased curse and disease duration, which Blizzard decided would have too much impact on both PvE and PvP. The Wowhead tooltip is misleading; at level 85, your resistance to harmful nature and shadow effects will be 64.
- Darkflight In essence, it's a free Dash every 3 minutes, and it doesn't share a cooldown with the real Dash. However, we've recently seen news that it's going to be changed to a 40 percent speed boost rather than 70 percent, making you as fast as ... the Travel Form you've already got. However, a Travel Form that you can heal in isn't something to treat lightly, and yes, Darkflight is usable from any form. Between this, Dash, and Stampeding Roar, you have absolutely no excuse for dying in fire.
- Flayer As with the tauren racial Cultivation, worgen get a bonus to a gathering profession. If you stick with it, you'll have a small critical strike buff (Master of Anatomy).
- Running Wild This was recently implemented in the beta, and it's very cool (though I wish Blizzard would slow down the animation for 100 percent run speed just a bit; it's hard to appreciate the art with all four legs running like a steam locomotive). It'll also save you money while you're leveling, because you'll find Running Wild pop up automatically in your spellbook at both level 20 and level 40 along with the corresponding riding skill.
- Two Forms This is a cosmetic ability that exists just for fun and will switch you between human and worgen form. As advertised, you'll change into a worgen at any point you enter combat.
- Viciousness Rather than the 1 percent crit you'd get with bows as a troll or guns with a dwarf, worgen have a flat 1 percent crit to everything they do. Overpowered? In comparison to other racial bonuses, yes.
Every week, Shifting Perspectives treks across Azeroth in pursuit of druidic truth, beauty and insight. Whether you're a bear, cat, moonkin, tree or stuck in caster form, we've got the skinny, from a look at the disappearance of the bear tank to thoughts on why you should be playing the class (or why not).Filed under: Druid, Analysis / Opinion, (Druid) Shifting Perspectives, Worgen
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Reader Comments (Page 3 of 8)
ophelia Nov 18th 2010 2:24PM
....Feminism QQ?
I don't see why it's such a big deal for the females to look afraid and dainty? 90% of girls I know would be pretty scared if they were locked up in a dungeon so I don't see how it's out of line or OMGSOTTLYWRONGZ for a female to look afraid.
So, the man looks like he's going to kick ass. And? I would expect that from a dude who would rather flail about like a moron like it'll do him any good.
Stone_Rhino Nov 16th 2010 6:15PM
I watched almost that entire video and I still have no idea what you mean by "gliding stealth".
Stone_Rhino Nov 16th 2010 6:27PM
Ugh, sorry about the double post. It was saying that I had just created a login even though I've been a member for a while
lilywillylover Nov 16th 2010 6:19PM
Ummm, you seem to be glossing over the fact that Xarantaur was made immortal by the Bronze Dragonflight.
His "age" is unnatural because he's an immortal Tauren.
Eisengel Nov 16th 2010 9:11PM
Not quite.
Even though he is immortal, we know who gave him his immortality and around what time. Based on that, we can tell about how old he was and what was going on at the time.
Honestly though, one you're down to a 30 year-ish span on an event over 10,000 years ago, it's close enough that you can just say it happened around the same time. The other thing is we know where the Nelfs came from, their story is well documented, but we have no idea where the Tauren came from or what they were up to in the past. For all we know Tauren were running around shapeshifting before the first Troll stumbled across the Well. I'd be willing to say that Tauren probably had discovered elements of Druidism (i.e. Druids of the Claw, etc), but didn't see them as a unified whole before Malf dropped in. They have Shamen as well, so I could see them separating the different elements of Druidism just as Shamen would separate different elements. Since their society was very tribal and nomadic I could see different tribes having different types of proto-druids as well, even so, I could also see them incorporating elements of Druidry within Shamanism (i.e. Moonfire as part of Elemental). So - while they may have come across elements of Druidry, they didn't connect the dots and have the unified picture they have today.
Also, to get a handle on the range of time we're talking about for this 'firstness', all of the events in WoW so far span about 26 years (the amount of time between Sylvanas' capture to Arthas' assimilation at the Frozen throne I see as the shortest amount of time before WoW could kick off with the Forsaken as a playable race and the Scourge firmly under Arthas' control and not the Legion's).
Chris Nov 16th 2010 6:16PM
Every post you have done so far in this series has been biased in some way or another towards Alliance races =(,
Dreyja Nov 16th 2010 6:47PM
Uhm... I read the one about the Tauren and it sounded pretty darn positive to me. She talks about the pros and cons of EACH RACE. Her article ALMOST pushed me over the edge to hold my nose and roll a tauren even though I loathe their allies. /shrug
lilywillylover Nov 16th 2010 6:19PM
You're glossing over the fact that Xarantaur was made immortal by the Bronze Dragonflight.
There's nothing wrong with the Warcraft RPG ages. Xarantaur's age is unnatural because he's an immortal Tauren.
Allison Robert Nov 16th 2010 7:01PM
Right. As acknowledged in the article, Xarantaur is an immortal -- but he didn't start off that way. He himself will tell you that he was about to die when granted immortality by the Bronze Dragonflight, which would put him anywhere between 100-150 at the time that that happened if the Warcraft RPG is still canon. But Malfurion Stormrage and any of his contemporaries would have been even older than Xarantaur in this same period -- again, assuming that the Warcraft RPG is accurate.
The average lifespan of a night elf before Nordrassil's immortality was in the region of 2,000 years, and they were considered young adults between 100 to 300 years. Malfurion at the time of the War of the Ancients was said to be a young adult; ergo, he's somewhere between 100 and 300 years old when it happened.
Xarantaur, by his own account, has also lived through the War of the Ancients, the Sundering, and a period spent afterwards traveling Kalimdor collecting stories (which I can only assumed comprised the vast majority of his life as he insists he assembled a fairly comprehensive set of stories from most Kalimdor cultures. Given the size of the Kalimdor landmass, there's no way he did this quickly). He's not gifted immortality until he's about to die at the end of his natural lifespan, which puts him anywhere between 100 and 150 years old then. Which means that he, too, was probably a young adult (or young-ish) when the War of the Ancients occurred -- which by tauren reckoning puts him somewhere between 30 and 50 years.
In other words, when the War hits, Malfurion is between 100 and 300 years old, and Xarantaur is between 30 and 50 years old. Their later immortality is a non-issue, because Malfurion is already older than Xarantaur. Xarantaur may very well outlive the night elves assuming that he retains his immortality and the night elves don't get theirs back, and it's conceivable that he'll be the oldest druid in existence as the more elderly among the night elves succumb to a natural death (or else get killed in battle).
But right now there's no reason to doubt that Blizzard's official line is disputed by Xarantaur's account. Xarantaur is old, but a host of night elf druids (and Malfurion himself) are still older.
Boobah Nov 16th 2010 7:28PM
So Malfurion is older. It doesn't really speak to who learned the whole druidy thing first; it only establishes that Malfurion could have started learning first. On the other hand, the Knaak books give the impression that Malfurion has only just started learning to be a druid, which leaves years for Xarantaur to have trained with Cenarius beforehand.
Of course, Cenarius, unlike many of the Ancients, didn't die or go into hiding during the War, so he'd've been around afterwards to take new students, too.
Ice Nov 16th 2010 6:23PM
Well hello Stampeding Roar+Darkflight+Dash+Nitro boots. Cant stop them now can you? Only thing that might come to that are worgen rogues with nitro boots and premed for cooldown reset on sprint. Oh the horror in battlegrounds..
lilywillylover Nov 16th 2010 6:24PM
There's nothing wrong with Xarantaur's age or the Warcraft RPG.
He was made immortal by the Bronze Dragonflight. He's over 10,000 years old because he's an immortal Tauren.
cocoboom Nov 16th 2010 6:24PM
I just don't get much out of staring at bear butt all day. Female wereChihuahua warrior for me :p
Hob Nov 16th 2010 6:27PM
"It's like watching Scientologists set up a branch office somewhere and their belief system infecting the local countryside with a fever of a hundred and werewolf."
Seriously, WTF?
Implanting alien eggs into a human brain rarely raises the body temperature above 99.9 degrees F, so your whole "fever of a hundred" is totally off.
Also, the plans for a controlled werewolf outbreak have been shelved. 2012 is no longer viable, dammit! We're looking at 2026, with the near-Earth approach of the Apophis asteroid.
It's called "fact-checking" folks. C'mon.
Hob Nov 16th 2010 6:30PM
Ohhh....
You were talking about the game...
Yeah... me too. Disregard the master plan, please.
lilywillylover Nov 16th 2010 6:27PM
I'm so sorry for the triple posts... been having trouble with the comment section with this browser today. =(
Dreyja Nov 16th 2010 6:59PM
Just today? Some of us wrestle with it daily. No worries. :) It happens.
Allison Robert Nov 16th 2010 7:25PM
Yeah, the comment system seems unusually sucky today. Although by "unusually sucky," I guess I mean "just marginally more sucky than the vortex of suck-hood it normally is."
Allison Robert Nov 16th 2010 7:26PM
Yeah, the comment system seems unusually sucky today. Although by "unusually sucky," I guess I mean "just marginally more sucky than the vortex of suck-hood it normally is."
Maribel Nov 16th 2010 8:25PM
I think it's been listening to our complaints, and now we see its terrible vengeance.