15 Minutes of Fame: Player RP campaign inspires goblin NPC

This is a story about a goblin named Mida -- Boss Mida <Her Tallness>, to be precise. Boss Mida is no ordinary NPC. Mida was born from a full-throttle player campaign of epic roleplaying enthusiasm -- a rally to bring a female Trade Princess to the Bilgewater goblins for Cataclysm.
The idea of a female Trade Princess sprang from the imagination of Sarpa of Moon Guard (US) early this year. The concept centered around the idea of a non-elven female leader who was "a wheelin' and dealin' woman who would put the 'B' of 'business' back into Bilgewater and whose character was not a foil to a more famous male character (Jaina and Arthas, Tyrande and Malfurion, Sylvanas and Arthas)," according to fellow Mida campaigner Dziewanna of Wyrmrest Accord (US). "The thread reached 391 pages before the old forums closed, spawned a community of players who come up with ideas like exploding robot squirrels and shredders in tuxedos," she continues, "and Blizzard was awesome enough to put the character our minds came up with in game: Boss Mida, <Her Tallness>. You might have seen her in the goblin slums already."
The Mida for Trade Princess story rolls onward with a brand new roleplaying guild on Wyrmrest Accord dedicated to overthrowing Gallywix and bringing Mida to power. "Explosives and engineers will be involved," warns Dziewanna (now Snuffit the goblin). Sound fun? We thought so, too -- so we got in touch with Sarpa (now Roulette, the goblin warlock), the player who made a forums post that ignited the Trade Princess fire among the many other players who helped build this roleplaying story.
Main character Roulette (formerly Sarpa of Moon Guard)Guild <For Her Tallest>
Realm Wyrmrest Accord (US-H)
15 Minutes of Fame: Let's start at the beginning, Roulette -- why a campaign for a female trade princess?
Roulette: It really all started with a post where people were musing about who the Trade Prince would be and what he'd be like. MVP Frejya made the teasing remark, "How do you know it's a guy?" or something along those lines. When I read that, I was inspired and really thrilled by the idea. I mean, we've never seen a female faction leader like that in any fantasy game for a playable race. They're always beautiful, ethereal elves or lovely spellweavers like Jaina. Even Sylvanas is an elf. Traditional female fantasy characters tend to have either a fairy princess or wicked witch vibe. You never see rough, tough, playful, grease monkey, Rosie the Riveter types, and goblins are the perfect race to do this with.
I saw it as an amazing opportunity for Blizzard to go in a unique direction and give us girl gamers who don't fit the typical princess mold someone to look up to and root for in the lore -- a leader who's not about the sex appeal but about personality, brains, and getting things done!
It would also be exciting to see an independent female faction leader who stands on her own two feet, is relatively emotionally stable, and doesn't resemble a foil to a male counterpart.
So was this more of a roleplaying campaign, or were you seriously angling to get action from Blizzard?
The initial thread was meant to plant a seed for Blizzard if they didn't already have plans set in stone. At the time, there was no word on the goblin lore for who was running the Bilgewater Cartel. Boss Mida and the roleplaying campaign that followed just kind of evolved from that. It was about the idea of a female goblin taking charge and the kind of leader we were hoping to see as goblin fans. To this day, the majority of us would be just as happy to see Sassy Hardwrench or another Blizz-created character that fits the bill take charge as Boss Mida.
In fact, I was initially wary of the fans giving her a name and getting so attached to a specific idea and concept. I wanted Blizz do their own thing with it, and even more than that, hoped that they were 10 steps ahead of us and already had something in store with Sassy when we heard about her. I saw Mida as a fun, crazy, lighthearted way to keep the idea alive. To see her actually put in game blew my mind!
Gallywix is unpopular amongst players and NPCs alike, and Thrall's decision to leave him in charge has left many of us scratching our heads. Thrall's "for now" gives us hope for a Trade Prince the Cartel can be proud of to take over after Gallywix.

What you see in game is a good gist of what we came up with. Blizz got the look, the personality, pretty much everything we were hoping for character-wise down!
In the beta, Mida's flavor text even hinted that she had a hand in rebuilding the auction house and bank as well as Orgrimmar itself. We wanted a leader who would be just as interested in the wealth of her Cartel as in filling her own pockets. Of course, good business sense says those two interests go hand in hand. She's certainly not selfless, but unlike Gallywix, she sees the big picture when it comes to making the big bucks.
The general consensus was that she would be named Mida Silvertongue (as in Midas) and nicknamed Her Tallest or Her Tallness, as goblin leaders seem to often be a bit taller than the rest and as a nod to Invader Zim. She's a rogue and an engineer, and she could sell refrigerators to the Tuskarr. We wanted someone clever, shrewd, and comical with a twisted sense of humor who could lead the Bilgewater Cartel to prosperity -- basically, someone who reflects what makes goblins great.
With all the time we had waiting for news of the Cartel and Cata itself, we amused ourselves coming up with all kinds of details of her past, habits, and more eccentric parts of her personality. Really, it was all a big communal exercise in brainstorming. For example, a trap door laser shark tank in her office ... a small legion of mechanical squirrel spies and clockwork shredders in business suits. Raids requiring appointments was a favorite, having to down her loyal pyromaniac mage personal assistant Kazit (who we used to call Bowie as a nod to Labyrinth's Goblin King) before you could even aggro the very busy, distracted Trade Princess. We had a lot of fun!
What kind of support did the campaign receive from other players?
We had a lot of people chiming in with ideas and support in the original thread, as well as a Facebook page, a WoWWiki page, a Wowpedia page, and I believe there's a fan-made Twitter, too. It spread to other forums, is all over Google and just took on a life of its own. It was incredible to watch the movement spread. The whole idea captured a lot of imaginations!
Denebvir and Dziewanna -- now my fellow GMs Brumley and Snuffit, respectively -- have been huge contributors to keeping everyone updated on the movement in the main thread and Facebook pages and now the guild site as well.
There's a lot of support from both male and female players for a female Trade Prince. For a while before any Trade Price was announced, Her Tallest was even used as a placeholder for the goblin leader in some of the Cataclysm threads discussing faction leadership.
What about the artwork and fanfic that came about?
The first thing that came to mind for me was to draw a goblin-based Rosie the Riveter Bilgewater propaganda poster. Then others began posting their own artwork based off the brainstorming in the thread -- what she might look like, different poses and encounters. It was and is still such a treat to see! Most of it is on the Facebook now, but we hope to get those up on the guild's gallery as well. Denebvir has gone wild with the fanfic and been a huge influence on the guild's subject-to-change-depending-on-what-Blizz-does lore.
When did you find out that Blizzard had put Mida into the game as an NPC?
I think it was early in the beta when someone who was testing posted a screenshot to the original thread. I was stunned! I can't even describe what a cool moment that was.

Well, I wouldn't call the thread or idea a complaint exactly. We did a good job, I think, of keeping it positive. The whole female leader thing isn't a Blizzard-specific issue but a common trope in fantasy games across the board. Noble orcs and the Horde perspective is a part of WoW that set it apart from more black-and-white games that had come before it. It's less a complaint and more a hope that Blizz will continue in this vein of stepping outside of the stereotypes most fantasy games have always bowed to. Often, it just doesn't occur to game companies to go there.
Including Boss Mida in game is a lovely nod to that goal. Here's hoping they seize the idea and run with it!
This whole effort has spawned an entire roleplaying guild on Wyrmrest. What's the focus there?
The movement has brought a bunch of goblin fans together, and what better way to continue those relationships and show our love of the Trade Princess idea than to form a guild? We all still want a goblin gal in charge and had planned to rally around Sassy till we found out Boss Mida was added. So we decided to focus the roleplay around a revolutionary group setting out to undermine Gallywix and put Boss Mida in power. We're already planning RP events which range from silly, lighthearted schemes to masked anti-Gallywix rallies.
Beyond that, we're also a laid-back, casual, social guild who understand each other's schedules and respect each other and other players. We just want to relax and have fun enjoying all the goblin-y goodness Cata has brought. We were always going to have fun with the idea, no matter what happened in game. That Blizz enjoyed our thread as much as we did just makes it all the better!

We have a website up and running through which we take applications. We have an FAQ there as well as links to the Facebook. We'll also be doing in-character recruitment, and that too will lead back to the website, keeping us nice and organized.
We're primarily a goblin guild, so if someone wants to join as another race, we require that there's a really good IC reason for that character to join. Non-RPing goblins are quite welcome so long as they're respectful of the rules of the realm and other players.
What about you? What are your plans, as we move into Cataclysm?
I'm going to be enjoying the hell out of my new toons and probably neglecting my old ones horribly. I'm a bit of an altaholic, and I have a feeling my first non-troll main Roulette will be the first of many goblins. Between the goblins, my shiny new troll druid, a beautiful new world to explore, and a guild full of wonderfully creative, friendly people I'm going to have plenty to keep me busy in Cata!
Filed under: Interviews, 15 Minutes of Fame, Cataclysm, Goblin
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 3)
poggg Dec 15th 2010 5:50PM
"Moonrest Accord"?
Try Wyrmrest Accord. You know, like the faction in WotLK? Huge group of dragons? IMPOSSIBLE to miss or confuse with anything else? Yeah, that one.
Kylenne Dec 15th 2010 6:20PM
People sometimes make mistakes when writing. There's no need to be so assy and rude about it.
Dave Dec 15th 2010 6:17PM
I remember seeing that thread in the early stages and totally agreeing that it would be awesome to see a female Trade Prince. I had no idea the movement had gotten so big.
Ayiano Dec 15th 2010 6:34PM
Props for WrA! I didn't realize was a nod to an NPC. I thought it was a play on words or something since Goblins are really short :P
Great job with this and way to go Blizz!
Haarits Dec 15th 2010 6:56PM
I like to think Blizzard does have something planned for Gallywix in a future patch, whether they're planning on Mida taking over or not. The logical choice for Thrall at the end of the goblin starting zone is to put the PLAYER in charge of the Cartel since the player's the one that saved the day, repeatedly. INCLUDING saving Gallywix--inadvertently--from the escape pods.
But we can't have hundreds of Trade Princes & Princesses running around the game...
I wonder if the Mida movement only got enough notice & support after they'd largely plotted the starting zone and Azshara, so while they could work her into Orgrimmar, it was too late to work her into the plot too much.
We know from the Wildhammer Fact Checker that just including a new NPC is easy enough, so adding Her Tallness with some text dialogue probably isn't terribly time-consuming, but reworking Kezan/Lost Isles/Azshara to incorporate her would be more of a challenge, even if they just replaced Sassy Hardwrench with Mida and at the end Thrall tries to promote you but you pass on the honor to your loyal former assistant. But Azshara's 'opulence' is more fitting for Gallywix anyway...
Here's hoping a patch comes along that finally ousts Gallywix & installs Boss Mida as the new Trade Princess!
arcaneterror Dec 15th 2010 6:58PM
But did they pay attention to the second longest thread on the forums, the "make the Draenei not sit on their asses the entire expansion thread (paraphrased)"?
Of course not.
Snuzzle Dec 16th 2010 10:40AM
Every expansion can't be about the Draenei. They had their time in the sun, they're not even FROM Azeroth (which, you know, just got totally rocked with a little something called the Cataclysm). I still run into plenty of Dranei NPCs, a lot of them in Deepholm as well. It's not all going to be TBC-like rubbing them in our faces.
arcaneterror Dec 17th 2010 10:42PM
I know everything won't be about the draenei. I'm not asking for that. All I want is for SOMETHING to be about the draenei. Literally every other playable race has new content, but never the draenei.
And if you think that one expansion and then nothing is how Blizzard operates, look at the Blood Elves. They got NEW FACTIONS in BOTH NEW EXPANSIONS. It's the inequality that really makes it infuriating.
RiderGeshtar Dec 15th 2010 7:00PM
@Blayze - I am giving you the benefit of the doubt here and assuming you don't know how the way you phrased things looks. :P I figure you didn't intend any harm by it, but - that was not the best way to express what you meant, there.
Anyway. As Kylenne said, we have all of two female racial leaders here; one is barely involved, which is beyond absurd considering how active she was in WCIII and how crucial to the whole thing unfolding as it did she was. The other's suffering one of the writers' attacks of hot-n'-cold face-or-heel-whiplash atrociousness. (Writers, why you gotta do this? See also: Kael'thas, Illidan. Hell, Arthas got this glorious slow descent into 'oh hell NO' that had me flailing as I watched the downward spiral into elbow-dropping Ner'zhul. If they absolutely MUST heel Sylvanas out, she deserves at least that type of character development! Where DID the shades of grey from the RTSes go?)
It sounds as if you are saying two female leaders active and written well is enough, and that we should be content with just that.
Survey says: *dzzzzzzzzzzzzt*.
It's not only women who are pining for the fjo--*cough* the RTS games' writing. A lot of male players really like strong women. (Note that this does not mean we are the only ones who count. We're just the loudest more often than not. :D) Why in the name of Thrall's balls and Varian's junks should we be settling for the bare minimum of effort when it comes to characters we - and by 'we' I mean male and female and hell ANY players - love to see kick ass and take names.
Quota, schmota. The quota is aaaaaaaaaall in your miiiiiiiiiiiiind. (Imagine I am doing that Wayne's World finger waggle.) This isn't somebody's grudging obligation, this is fans' desire. if you can't see that, then WOW.
Now that I'm done talking his ear off and probably being a general all-round pedantic jerk: whether Mida or Sassy becomes the Trade Prince(ss), I will be a happy pedantic jerk. Gallywix is beyond incompetent as a leader, and is a douche to boot.
Annoyed Dec 15th 2010 7:06PM
Well, I suppose there has to be a female leader placed into power by men at times in games, just like in real life.
Saltytoes Dec 15th 2010 7:54PM
Thank you Blizzard.
Thank you WoW.com
Broken-toes Dec 15th 2010 8:20PM
Not a role player, but honestly why whats his face as a leader, why would i follow him, makes no sense considering the starting zone- I mean ace would make more sense.
Guess I ain't gettin myself in the goblin mind set or leveling past 20 just quite yet, but still whats the reason in gallywix, he just seems lazy story telling from my stand point.
The whole goblins all bout the mighty G only goes so far before till it becomes "meh", you can't honestly explain raidin deathwing with gold and self interest alone!
Trentrollins Dec 15th 2010 9:16PM
I am ZIM!
Eddy Dec 15th 2010 10:38PM
Kylenne and RiderGeshtar basically said it perfectly, but I have a few additions and anecdotes.
I first realized this issue with the big wallpaper that Blizzard put out for the anniversary- when I noticed that there were only two women, and both of them were, ahem, well proportioned. Now, attractive people are more likely to inspire confidence in followers, I'm sure that's well documented, but I've read some studies that suggest that fashion, and western culture in general, emphasizes shrinking the female body to make it less threatening. I don't know if that's what's going on with the sexualized women in warcraft, but it isn't reassuring, nor is the vulnerability of the plate/mail bikini that all the new females seem to have to wear (dragons included.) That exposed stomach just looks like an intestinal injury waiting to happen.
I am glad to see more awesome supporting females in WoW, though. The dwarf shaman in Deepholm is amongst my favorite characters ever- she almost makes up for the fact that I can only think of a single female questgiver in Uldum (unless, I suppose, some of the Tolvir were female and I wasn't paying attention). Sad, too, because I recall that the supporting women were pretty tough in the Indiana Jones films, but apparently not so much in the Harrison Jones saga. (I can't speak to the other zones, because those are the only two I've really explored in any depth.)
Ringo Flinthammer Dec 15th 2010 11:00PM
There's a pretty epic female warrior in the Wetlands, as well, who also shows up at the end of the questline there in sort of an "All-Stars vs. the Zone Bad Guys" thing that happens in several of the revised zones.
Skarlette Dec 16th 2010 12:25AM
Sadly, from what I've seen, the Tol'vir have fallen to the same curse as many NPC races...no female model. Unless all the female Tol'vir are hiding the same place as the female Taunka, Broken, Ogres, non-jungle trolls, etc...
Gizen Dec 16th 2010 12:47AM
@Skarlette There are female Taunka, but they seem to just use the same model as ordinary female Tauren, or at least are so similar as to be nearly indistinguishable.
Mimzy Dec 16th 2010 1:10AM
All hail her Tallness!!
/salute
Hollow Leviathan Dec 16th 2010 6:36AM
On a related note, people seeking equal/nonstereotypical gender portrayal should probably avoid alliance-side Twilight Highlands entirely. All leaders of the Wildhammer clans are male, and the only interaction you get with their (dwarven!) women is when they are worrying their little heads over their brothers or their possessions, or to rescue/marry them off. There's even a reference to a porn star later on. Not a moral high point for Blizzard storytelling.
Krytture Dec 16th 2010 9:50AM
Front lines of a war? No women except ones looking for missing people? Wow..how weird is that?