Know Your Lore, Tinfoil Hat Edition: Silence of the Titans

Once upon a time, godlike creatures of order called Titans landed on a small, unassuming planet named Azeroth and proceeded to reorganize it. After they left, the planet was invaded by malevolent creatures called Old Gods -- creatures of chaos and destruction. The Titans returned to the little planet, horrified at what had happened, and rose up against the Old Gods and their elemental lieutenants in what was the most horrific war the planet had ever seen. But instead of destroying the Old Gods, the Titans were forced to imprison them deep within the planet.
They set safeguards over the fragile world -- draconic aspects to watch over the various domains of life, the earth, magic, time, and nature. They created new guardians to watch over the prisons of the Old Gods. They created a magical font of energy, tied to the Twisting Nether -- the Well of Eternity. And satisfied with their work, the Titans left. No one on the fragile planet has seen them since; they are spoken of in history and in legend, but they've never returned.
Why? Of all the questions in Azeroth, this is the biggest by far. Why did the Titans imprison the Old Gods, instead of starting over from scratch? Common theory suggests they liked the planet too much to re-originate it, yet they left behind safeguards that would do exactly that, if the Old Gods escaped again. So why not simply do so to begin with? Why leave the world as it stood? More importantly -- why are we here?
Today's Know Your Lore is a Tinfoil Hat edition, meaning the following is a look into what has gone before with pure speculation on why it happened. The events presented are events that happened in Azeroth's history, but the conclusion is simply a theory and shouldn't be taken as fact.

Sargeras was the leader of the Titan armies, charged with eliminating any threat to the Titan's plans of universal order. He fought anything that posed a threat to order -- primarily demons native to the Twisting Nether, horrific entities of pure evil. This task was performed for millennia, but as time slowly progressed, something happened to Sargeras. In being exposed to all of this evil, in witnessing its work, Sargeras began to wonder if the Titans' task would ever be completed, and he slipped into despair.
After all, it seemed like no matter where the Titans went, evil was always present. And as he pondered this concept, he came to the realization that perhaps the order the Titans were trying to set to the universe was an act of utmost folly. If the very nature of the universe was chaos, destruction, and evil, then why were the Titans bothering to reorder worlds? Why bother trying to change the nature of the universe? Perhaps the Titans were wrong to try and set the universe in order, if the universe wasn't meant for order to begin with. As he sank further into depression, Sargeras eventually left the Pantheon, overcome with madness and convinced that if the nature of the universe was chaotic and evil, that was what he should spread -- not order. Not peace.

But these demons weren't intelligent enough to run an army. So Sargeras sought out intelligent creatures that could be swayed to join his purpose and run things, creatures intelligent enough to understand tactics, cunning, and power. He found those leaders on a remote planet called Argus, in a race known as the eredar. Two of the three leaders of Argus agreed to serve him -- Kil'jaeden and Archimonde. The third leader, Velen, declined his offer, an act that infuriated his fellow leaders.
Velen had had a vision, granted by the naaru K'ure, that told him of Sargeras' ultimate plans. Rather than ally himself with evil, Velen joined with the naaru, and his people became servants of the Light, directly opposed to the Burning Legion and all it stood for. Velen and his people fled, eventually renaming themselves draenei, or "exiled ones."
Meanwhile, the Titans of the Pantheon chose a successor for Sargeras, one of his former lieutenants called Aggramar. While the Titans were saddened at Sargeras' departure, they continued on with their mission -- creating order within worlds. And one of the worlds they encountered after Sargeras' departure was Azeroth.
It is history ... A history of Silithus ... of Ahn'Qiraj ... of Titans and Old Gods ... I read from the Prophecy of C'Thun as written by the Qiraji Prophet Skeram. A prophecy that portends a cataclysm ...
In the time before time, when the world was still in its infancy, a battle between a Titan and a being of unimaginable evil and power raged on this very soil. The prophecy is unclear about whether or not the Titan was vanquished in this battle but it illustrates that a Titan fell. An Old God had also fallen -- or so it was thought.
-- The Prophecy of C'Thun

The Titans did manage to get the upper hand in the war with the Old Gods, but they discovered that the Old Gods had integrated themselves so closely with Azeroth that the world and the Old Gods' fate were forever intertwined. If the Old Gods were destroyed, so too would Azeroth cease to exist. Rather than re-originate the world, the Titans put in safeguards -- the Aspects, the titanic watchers, the strongholds of Uldum, Ulduar and Uldaman -- and created the Well of Eternity.
Now, most everything on that list makes sense. The Aspects would watch over the various areas that the Titans themselves specialized in. The strongholds were made to hold history, to hold the Old Gods, and in the event of an uprising of the Old Gods, to trigger a re-origination of the planet. Yet it's the third action the Titans took that continues to confuse me, and that's where the theorizing starts. Why create the Well of Eternity? Why create a font of unimaginable power on a planet infested by Old Gods?
Look at what happened with the Well of Eternity -- the night elves discovered it or were perhaps created from it. After an undetermined amount of time, the night elves began using the Well in ways that the Titans surely didn't intend. This reckless use of magic attracted the attention of Sargeras, Dark Titan and leader of the Burning Legion. It's because of the Well's presence that the Burning Legion was ever drawn to Azeroth. So why create it?
Because the Titans wanted Sargeras to come to Azeroth.

There was a reason the Titans didn't simply re-originate Azeroth, and it lies within the Prophecy of C'thun. The only recorded instance of Titanic death is by the hands of an Old God. Wouldn't it make sense then, that the only creature capable of destroying Sargeras, a former Titan, would be either an Old God or the world of heroes that managed to figure out a way to defeat that Old God? And what better way to take the former Titan by surprise than to continue on with their task -- organizing worlds -- while creating one, perhaps two worlds with a purpose other than simple order? Sargeras would never suspect it.
There was a reason the Titans created the Well of Eternity and left it on the inconspicuous planet: to eventually attract the attention of Sargeras. We were meant to fight the War of the Ancients; it was the beginning of our training. By defeating the agents of the Burning Legion, we began to understand the enemy and better prepare ourselves for future conflicts.
And those conflicts just kept coming. Over the course of Azeroth's history, the Burning Legion would rise up time and time again. And each time, we pushed them back. It wasn't a total victory, but it was a way to silently train us, to teach us how to fight back. We created the Council of Tirisfal, the Guardian, and we found a way to destroy the Dark Portal. We fought the armies of the Burning Legion, orcs from another world altogether, and beat them. We not only beat them, they settled on Azeroth and joined the fight against the Burning Legion as well.

And in between these struggles with the Burning Legion, the citizens of Azeroth have slowly become aware of the existence of the Old Gods. The odd penchant of the dwarves for digging up historical information revealed more about the Old Gods than we'd ever contemplated before -- that the Old Gods were tied to Azeroth, and the destruction of the Old Gods meant Azeroth's destruction as well.
Yet despite this information, we continued to prevail against these enemies. Allies of the Old Gods were brought down in Silithus. In Northrend, we fought tooth and nail against Nerubians that had allied with Yogg-Saron. And when push came to shove and it was discovered that a titanic watcher, Loken, had fallen to the will of the Old Gods, we destroyed him. That destruction sent a signal to the Titans, and their response was Algalon the Observer.

Perhaps Algalon's purpose wasn't to destroy Azeroth. Perhaps his purpose was to determine what, exactly, had happened with the denizens of the planet, the tiny weapons the Titans had planted on Azeroth so many millennia before. Algalon's reaction after his defeat seems to suggest that we've accomplished far more in much shorter time than the Titans had ever expected us to do:
I have seen worlds bathed in the Makers' flames. Their denizens fading without so much as a whimper. Entire planetary systems born and raised in the time that it takes your mortal hearts to beat once. Yet all throughout, my own heart, devoid of emotion... of empathy. I... have... felt... NOTHING! A million, million lives wasted. Had they all held within them your tenacity? Had they all loved life as you do?
Perhaps it is your imperfection that which grants you free will. That allows you to persevere against cosmically calculated odds. You prevailed where the Titans' own perfect creations have failed.

Will we see the Titans come to Azeroth? Perhaps, some day. But I am beginning to doubt that the Titans will appear just in time to rescue us from the Old Gods. It may very well be that when the Titans appear, it will be to ask for our help, to ask for our aid in defeating the one creature that poses the largest threat to the universe -- Sargeras.
And it may very well be that we're the only creatures in the universe capable of destroying him.
For more information on related subjects, please look at these other Know Your Lore entries:
- Yogg Saron
- The Council of Tirisfal and the last Guardian
- The Eternals: The Titans
- The Old Horde
- The Third War, part one and part two
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 4 of 6)
Kaphik Feb 6th 2011 9:50PM
That's a great theory there. It makes a lot of sense, and makes the whole story of Sargeras even more tragic. Maybe in a few years we get to fight Sargeras in a raid, and instead of killing him when we defeat him we turn him back.
Anathemys Feb 6th 2011 9:47PM
This, I think, is pure genius. It actually makes sense.
However, there is one thing I'd like to add. Maybe, as said in the article, the Titans will come here asking for our help. Or, maybe, Algalon will report back that we're too strong. That we've become too powerful. I mean, the Titans couldn't destroy the Old Gods, and yet we've "killed" two. By the end of this expansion, we'll probably be able to add at least one more to that count.
What if the Titans grow afraid of us. What if they let us destroy the Burning Legion and THEN destroy us? Algalon, if not actually a Titan, is a being significantly more powerful than the Titanic Watchers, and we beat him up pretty good.
To me, the Titans just seem much to cool to pass up as raid bosses, lore-wise and freakin'-awesome-wise. Lore wise, they're OBSESSED with order. And what could be less orderly than us? Some of us actually control agents of the Burning Legion! From everything I know about WoW lore, the Nauuru, as weird as their introduction was, seem like the most viable "Big Goods" for Warcraft. The Titans just seem like another group of well-intentioned extremists/acceptable targets.
arcaneterror Feb 6th 2011 10:09PM
"the Nauuru"
Nauru? That little island country?
arcaneterror Feb 6th 2011 10:10PM
Addendum: looking at your final paragraph... A troper, are you?
RetPallyJil Feb 6th 2011 9:48PM
It's "razed," not "raised."
MikeLive Feb 6th 2011 10:18PM
I really have to finish up my Argus expansion idea (I'm at a loss for x.2 story) and post it - it fits in perfectly with the last paragraph: Titans come to Azeroth to recruit us in taking down the Burning Legion.
Oteo Feb 6th 2011 10:23PM
The Tinfoil Hat Editions are always interesting, but I can't read them without my brain going "OR maybe Blizzard is just flying by the seat of its pants."
Chaia Feb 7th 2011 12:09AM
Yeah, I always wonder that, myself. Maybe Chris Metzen uses Ann's tin-foil hat articles to work his way out of nasty lore loose ends...
Reklisc Feb 6th 2011 10:28PM
I just wanted to make a little point:
Though you did make note of the Council of Tirisfal and the Guardians, there WAS a match between Aegwynn and a shade of Sargeras himself, which DID end with Aegwynn's win, but the shade just sat inside her and possesed the next Guardian, her son Medivh. So Sargeras has had quite a bit of experience witnessing the increase of power the mortals of Azeroth have been buiding up, now on to the newest Guardian, Med'an, son of the Sargeras-possessed Medivh.
Iknow most who read this will know this; I was just saying I thought it was kinda relevant to the article.
Sargeras may return sooner than we think in a full-scale wave, depending on how exactly we "won" in Outland. I can't wait to see them finaly folow up!!
thegatherer Feb 6th 2011 11:05PM
This does make sense. If Algalon had only been sent to Azeroth to determine whether or not it should be re-originated, he would have left before we could even have attacked him. Also, we could have just killed him, and had Brann made the reply code the alpha one.
I think it is exactly like you said, Algalon was sent here to test our ability to defend ourselves/defeat super powerful beings.
malakor12345 Feb 7th 2011 12:06AM
I think I said this before on another titan related TFH edition. Someone has seen a titan since they last came to Azeroth. War of the Ancients, Azshara talking to Sargeras, Broxigar wounding Sargeras, and I'd be surprised if Kil'Jaeden hasn't seen another titan. Other then that really great article. Goes into the usual sentient races being able to defeat any evil eventually. Though I think eventually we will be like robots in the apocalypse. The Titans have made us to fight their battles for them and then realized "Oh shit they haz teh uber hackzorz" (cause all titans speak nerd duh) and will try to eliminate us. Then it will be an epic battle for survival and either we will win or a titan will hit a button and nuke us to hell.
potatoboy Feb 7th 2011 12:23AM
I sent a question to theshow@wowinsider.com on 1/31 with the following text. Somehow this seems related.
"Love the show, can't wait for more live shows, or just more frequent shows in general.
While questing an alt through Wrath, I found myself doing some of the Freya quests again, and I got to wondering about the random Titan machinery that seems to be running Azeroth. We all know that the Titans shaped Azeroth, but we don't know why. With the updated lore surrounding the Draenei and Velen's vision on the upcoming battle, I went into tinfoil hat mode.
Is there any evidence, suggestions, musings, or possibility that Azeroth, or those that inhabit it are intended to be a weapon of the Titans?"
Anne Stickney Feb 7th 2011 3:15AM
Weird timing, but entirely coincidental - this article spawned from a late-night conversation Rossi and I had well before then, just after I'd finished writing the strongholds of the Titans KYL article.
raion Feb 7th 2011 12:28AM
Woooooooooooooooooooooooow!!!!
alpha5099 Feb 7th 2011 12:30AM
This is a quite nifty theory, though it paints the Titans in a far more benevolent light than I generally view them. The Titans aren't evil, but they are at best indifferent, at worst outright hostile to anything that goes against their conception of order and perfection. We're corrupted and weak and mortal. We are not a part of the Titans' plan for the universe, and someday I think they're going to come back and they will not be happy to see what has become of us.
I don't want to be some pawn in the Titans' grand plan. I want us to have to stand up to the Titans and say "No, we did this on our own, we do not need you."
RetPallyJil Feb 7th 2011 12:51AM
But did we?
Polloloco Feb 7th 2011 12:43AM
I dont think the titans would ask for help. If anything they will stand back let us take down the old gods and once that's accomplished they'll try to get rid of us. I think blizzard will head that way cuz wats more epic than creator vs creation? Besides the titans would reason that azerothnians see the titans as beings that can be corrupted and turned evil, and also a constant threat to Azeroth. Azeroths heroes vs titans is my guess
Kbs Feb 7th 2011 12:58AM
/equip TFH
1, Titans come to barren planet, at war with the Burning Legion
2, Titans perform experiments to create Biological Weapons to use against said Legion
3, Titans are pulled away due to an escalation else-where. Unsure as to what to do with the fledgling weapon, they put in place things to control and observe (Or if they are noted to be out of control, Destroy)
4, Azeroth goes out of control, destroying all devices of control that the Titans have left behind (Of the Control gets corrupted by other means, or itself goes out of control)
5, Titans eventually return, to see the experiment gone out of control, and become the next set of expansion bosses/Use us to kill Sargeras/old gods then turn around and say our use is over and then set out to destroy what they started.
Maybe c.c
Yada Feb 7th 2011 12:58AM
Very nicely written. Congratulations.
ryanisawesomeish Feb 8th 2011 6:03PM
Someone earlier said that can a being create something more powerful than itself, but imo we weren't originally created to be a weapon against sargeras. It's just that when the titans came back to azeroth and saw what had happened to their creations at the hands of the old gods (curse of the flesh), they saw that the so called curse had left us with a stronger ability to oppose forces of evil like sargeras because of the corruption of the old gods and the well of eternity.Basically what i mean is that if the Old Gods hadn't corrupted our beings of azeroth and given us more free will instead of being beings of pure order we wouldn't have had the ability or the power to fight against beings such as Sargeras and the Old Gods themselves. This is a common motif in stories where the great evil actually empowers the creatures they are trying to corrupt/rule/destroy through an incidental way (Harry Potter and Voldemort is the first example that pops into my head). All in all i love your KYL segments and keep up the good work, Sorry for the mini wall of text.