All the World's a Stage: Memories and moments in time

Memories. Regardless of who you are or what your background is comprised of, one of the core concepts of being human is that you carry your memories with you. Good or bad, these memories of past events, arguments and special moments help shape you into the person you are today. Human beings take those memories and use them to shape their perception of what's happening to them in the present, or even in the future. It's all part of being human.
The same applies to roleplay and creating a "realistic" character. Last week, we talked about looking at your character with a critical eye -- an exercise in distancing yourself emotionally from that character you've created and looking at the bare bones behind it and any problems that might arise. Over the next couple of weeks, we're going to be looking at character creation from the other end of things, how to comfortably root your character into existing lore and give him or her that touch of realism that sets your character apart.
A common question that pops up among roleplayers is how old their character "should" be. This is entirely up to you -- make yourself as old or as young as you like! But the older a character is, the more likely it is that that character has lived through important moments in the Warcraft timeline -- and as such, you, the player, should have a basic understanding of where your character fits into those events. You don't have to know the exact dates or events, or even names of major figures, but knowing what memories of past historical events your character holds dear can give your character an extra edge of "realism" in Azeroth.

One of the best places to go to for source information regarding timelines and historical events in Warcraft is Wowpedia. It's got a few different timelines listed on the website.
Official Timeline (2007) This timeline is a compilation of what was on the official World of Warcraft website. It dates from the War of the Ancients all the way up to Wrath of the Lich King. Each expansion on the official timeline spans one year, according to Blizzard. When the orcs came to Azeroth, that was considered year 0. Unfortunately, due to the recent site redesign, the timeline is no longer available for viewing on the official site; however, a snapshot of what it looked like is there to be viewed. By following the pattern Blizzard has established, Cataclysm is year 28 of the timeline.
Unofficial Timeline This timeline takes into account all books, in-game items and quests, RPG source books and essentially anything that ever referenced a specific date. It compiles all of that information into one full timeline that spans from the beginning of Azeroth and the original appearance of the Old Gods, all the way up to present day. As an unofficial timeline, the dates aren't really "real" according to Blizzard, and there is some discrepancy between what happened in what year.
We aren't really going to use the unofficial timeline as a source of dates -- what we're going to be looking at is what happened, in what order. So if you want a character who is approximately 25 years old, and we are in year 28, your character was born in year 3. Looking at the official timeline, we can see that the following happened:
- In year 3, the orcs had already come through the portal into Azeroth and destroyed Stormwind.
- The Second and Third wars would have happened in your character's lifetime.
- Your character would have been around 3-6 years of age during the Second War.
- Your character would have been around 17 years of age during the Third War.
- World of Warcraft began when your character was 22 years old.
Now that you know what your character would have a basic understanding about, you can realistically root your character in the world around him. As far as the unofficial timeline on Wowpedia is concerned, the dates may not be quite the same, but the order of events is still there. However, what the unofficial timeline offers is links -- a whole host of links to in-game history books, RPG guides, Blizzard novels and other events that took place during your character's lifetime. If you really want to go in depth with your character's history, going through the links in your character's lifetime will give you an even firmer grasp on what happened.

What you're looking for here isn't an all-encompassing grasp of every moment in your character's life to date. In your own life, can you realistically remember your first steps or your first words? How about your first crush, or your first trip away from home? Do you remember where you were when the Challenger exploded? Where you were at when Jim Henson died? Where you were on 9/11? The more impact a moment has in your life, the more likely you are to remember what you were doing at that precise moment.
So what you want to do in the case of the timeline is go through the history and pick a few moments in time that have a special significance to your character. He may not have cared about the Third War -- but perhaps the death of Cenarius just prior to the Third War impacted him in a deep and profound way. If he was in the Eastern Kingdoms, the rise of the Scourge followed by the rise of the Forsaken may have affected him, particularly if that character is a human who had relatives or loved ones in Lordaeron.
Now take those moments and figure out how they relate to your character and how that colors his or her impression of the present and future. A night elf who mourned the death of Cenarius for years would certainly have something to say about the events in Hyjal. A dwarf who experienced the War of the Three Hammers first hand is probably feeling very conflicted about the current situation in Ironforge. These moments that you choose to latch onto your character's development help shape his relation to not only world events, but the characters around him as well.

Characters who are hundreds or even thousands of years old are entirely possible to play, but you have to keep in mind what race you're playing and what the life span of that race is. The other thing you need to consider is what it was that allowed your character to have lived such an extraordinary amount of time. There is an excellent entry in Wowpedia regarding life spans and how to determine the life span of your character, as well as a list of ages for each of the Warcraft races.
Keep in mind that the source material for these life spans was taken from the RPG books and may or may not be a valid source of information. For example, night elves are listed as only living up to 2,000 years -- but there are several examples in lore of night elves that are far, far older than that. Night elves were immortal until the end of the Third War when Nordrassil was destroyed, so it's entirely possible that a night elf could have lived all the way from the War of the Ancients until now. Night elves that have been born since the destruction of Nordrassil are full-out mortal and aren't expected to live nearly as long as their predecessors.
The draenei aren't listed, either. As a relatively "new" race, the draenei have the potential to be very, very old indeed. Velen was obviously around for the fall of the eredar and the emergence of the Burning Legion over 25,000 years ago; others reference the fall of Argus. Are draenei immortal? Not exactly. They can be killed; they can be raised as Scourge. But they have the potential for living an incredibly long time.
The Forsaken are another special case. These guys have only been around since the Third War, when Sylvanas and other Scourge broke free of the Lich King's grasp and formed their own faction. As undead, they do not age, although they can die "the final death," as they call it. There are no Forsaken children as far as we've seen, and it's likely because children would make very ineffective soldiers for the Scourge, so none were risen.

It's important to remember that ancient characters are old, and act accordingly. Consider what memories would be vivid in their minds, and also consider how long an event is going to stay fresh in your character's mind before age simply lets it slip away. Has age deteriorated his memory? Can he still remember names, or is it just the events, and the names have since been lost? The older a character is, the less likely he or she is to remember with crystal clarity.
Giving your character a sense of the past helps link him or her to the Warcraft universe, rooted in the lore that exists. Think about it -- a lot of the reasons you act and think about things the way that you do have to do with what you've done in the past and how you've reacted to similar situations. Characters may just be an invention, but adding important memories of their past helps to take them past that two-dimensional aspect and boost their "realism." Looking to the past and linking your character to the memories they hold can do a lot towards opening new doors for interaction in the future.
Filed under: All the World's a Stage (Roleplaying)






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Andre Jan 9th 2011 4:18PM
Would a Gilnean who was born when the wall was erected be approximately 22?
squig_masta Jan 9th 2011 8:41PM
The Wall was erected sometime after the second war, so you'd probably be a bit younger then that based on the above timeline, but not by much.
I recently created a worgen who was born after the wall because I wanted to make someone who hadn't even seen a dwarf or orc. I realized pretty quickly that might make him way too young, so I got around it by fudging the numbers and saying he was 2 years old or so when the gate went up, and he only has some extremely hazy memories of greenskin monsters. I don't know if that's what you're getting at, but remember that if you're a little creative you can make the kind of character you want, if not the way you want it. :)
yarf Jan 10th 2011 1:31AM
I have actually been doing some extensive research to figure that out and the Know Your Lore: Worgens, and the all the worlds a stage: Playing a worgen articles both were very helpful in determining that yes, if you were born after the wall was erected you are about 20 years, give or take one to two. You have never seen night elves until they show up in Gilneas, you have never seen Orcs or Trolls or Taurens or goblins or Draenei. You have seen humans, and that's it. You MAY have seen a forsaken if you stood up on the ramparts of the wall and looks over if any forsaken were meddling about on the other side.
What I am trying to find out, now, is how long has it been since the worgen invaded gilneas to when they reentered the alliance? I understand it's been about 10 years, so that'd make most characters born after the wall was raised around 10 years old when they were turned into worgen. They certainly weren't born that way, unless they are only around 10 themselves. Young children at the time, so if your character was, say, 4 or 5 when the worgen invaded, making you about 15 years old, likely you wouldn't have even survived the attack. Who's to say, though?
Anyone else have any ideas on that? I'm trying to come up with the age of my worgen, but I'm not sure how old she is, based on when the attack initially occurred. If it was very recent, then it doesn't matter, but it does change her story a bit. She's not created, yet, so I can still easily manipulate the character and change her class or anything based on that.
negressive Jan 9th 2011 5:43PM
Has there been official word yet on how long it has been between Wrath and Cata? According to the trend it would be one year, but I have heard varied numbers.
My RP guild has just chosen a date to work around until it gets clarified, but specifics would help. Am I missing a year of my story somewhere?
Josho Jan 9th 2011 6:00PM
Wrath takes place over two (three?) years; by the time those two years are up it's Cataclysm time. The only time your characters may have missed is, say, a week, maybe a month between Pre-Shattering and Post-Shattering patches. That's my understanding of it.
negressive Jan 9th 2011 9:15PM
You're still thinking of it in terms of game time. That does not equate to how long it took in the lore. Consider the events in the Stormrage novel, how long did they take? How did your character feel after waking from the nightmare?
So many people haven't read the book and yet it changed fundamental lore (such as the Nightmare) consideraby.
So thanks, I know how long Wrath took. What I want to know is, "when" are we now?
Lanuria Jan 9th 2011 11:32PM
You aren't missing a year. Blizzard has stated that some of the construction, changes have been going on during Wrath, but they couldn't just make patches to show those things. Places like Stormwind were -always- the way they are now, minus the park and changes that came from Deathwing, we as roleplayers, need to retcon ourselves a bit to make it work. I believe they said something along the lines of suspension of disbelief.
There wasn't a timeskip, things just happened. We went from Wrath to Cata and while the construction just appeared outta nowhere one day, it wasn't like that for our characters, it has been going on for a while now. How long? I'm not sure, but we didn't just wake up one morning and go "OH LOOK, A NEW ORG!"
Fletcher Jan 10th 2011 4:24AM
There's a satyr in Hyjal who states that the Battle of Mount Hjyal was "a decade ago". If he can be taken at his word - he *is* a satyr, but he doesn't have much reason to lie about the date - that gives us a solid point in time to pin Cataclysm to.
Baba Jan 10th 2011 5:34AM
Well, whilst Stormwind's huge expansion can be overlooked as supposedly always having been there, that can't work for Orgrimmar since the whole place had to be destroyed in order for it to be rebuilt in such a fashion. I know that it'd take over a year at least just to refurbish a gigantic front gate like that, even if your contractor is as violently impatient as Garrosh.
I have been of the opinion that the Shattering has been slowly working itself through Azeroth over perhaps a two year timespan at the least, starting from when Deathwing razed Org / SW etc. This would give NPC's enough time to develop new quests / problems, as well as for the new flora to flourish in zones of great climatic change, eg Blasted Lands.
RetPallyJil Jan 9th 2011 5:46PM
I'm not on an RP server, but from the amount of building done (and not done) I'd put it in the 1-2 year bracket; time enough for some stuff to be fixed, but not all of it.
Fartmasterking Jan 9th 2011 10:38PM
well, the Orcs rebuilt the crappy Dragonmaw fort into a supreme fort of awesome in like, 25 miniutes, =they commented on how badass Garroshs horde was to be able to do such a thing,
Seroiusly, Wooden hut to OMFG GIANT STEEL TOWERS in 25 miniutes.
Baba Jan 10th 2011 5:36AM
Yeah but they just used one of the goblins' [OMFG-Giant-Steel-Towers-in-a-box]
/shrug
Iirdan Jan 9th 2011 5:51PM
Rule #1 of roleplaying memories:
This is NOT Eternal Sunshine.
I've seen a fair many people who claim to have their memories erased or something to that effect - it gets dangerously close to Sue territory at times. It's much better to have simple memories than complex ones that were removed.
Moeru Jan 9th 2011 6:14PM
Agreed. Time should affect your character. If you can't place your character in the timeline you've chosen, then you need to reconsider your character or the timeline. Not that I'm saying you have to be chained by the WoW timeline, but you should take into consideration that some people might look at you crossly if you say you were 4 when the Orcs invaded and you're 90.
Saeadame Jan 9th 2011 10:11PM
I figure most in-game characters, particularly old ones, should just have a memory like my real life memory. I can't remember a lot of things than happened even a day or week ago, but I can remember almost anything if something reminds me of it. A really old character might not even remember things that are fairly important unless something they come across jogs their memory =).
Zanaji Jan 10th 2011 11:33AM
According to the quest http://www.wowhead.com/quest=12746#comments draenei deathknights are quite possibly 25k years old, as the quest NPC talks about your character being born on Argus.
"Think. Think back. Try and remember the proud mountains of Argus, where you were born. Remember the splendor of life. You were a champion of the draenei once! This isn't you. "
Suzaku Jan 10th 2011 2:30PM
Cataclysm is year 30 in the official timeline. It takes place 10 years after the Battle for Mount Hyjal in WCIII and 5 years after the death of Edwin VanCleef in Classic WoW, according to new quest dialogue. It's been three years since the start of the War in Northrend.
Rhass Jan 31st 2011 5:27PM
My take on Gilneas timeline
Ref: http://www.wowwiki.com/Timeline_(unofficial)
Year 0 - First War (Year 592 by King’s calendar)
Year 20 - End of 2nd War. Alliance splinters, Graymane wall built
19 years pass
Year 39 - The Shattering, Graymane wall cracks, Invasion of Gilneas by Forsaken begins
9 yrs of war with Forsaken
Year 48 - “After the victory Gilneas rejoined the Alliance after 28 years.”
Rhass Jan 31st 2011 5:43PM
Ref: http://www.wowwiki.com/Timeline_(unofficial)
This timeline seemed to make the most logical sense to me and easiest to work with.