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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Mystery of the Unborn Val'kyr
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Reader Comments (Page 5 of 6)
Stella Feb 7th 2011 1:31AM
God created Arrakis to train the faithful.
Nair Feb 7th 2011 2:21AM
Im just throwing this in total ignorance.
Has anyone (I remark i have no idea if there is even evidence to do so) tried to see Blizzards lore as one? I dont know about Diablo, but Starcraft, some times (the naruu, proto stuff) seems like some sort of "same" universe.
So, yhea, out of the blue and with no real info. Just asking if you, better informed ppl, had ever make some Tinfoil Hat connections...
pd. Im sorry if my enlgish is as terrybad as I think it is...
JKWood Feb 8th 2011 11:02PM
World of Warcraft is known to still be played in the time period that Starcraft takes place in. So no, they don't share a universe.
Boozard Feb 7th 2011 2:35AM
I confess that when i first read the article above, the first thing that popped into mind is DC's Final Crisis.
i have to gather my thoughts here. so much to write about... but this is what i want to believe. the titans approach azeroth with caution, not because of the old gods, but rather the evolving denizens on the surface. when the titans arrived the second time and waged war with the old gods, they were about to re-originate the planet. but something about the denizens infected them... free will and the desire to survive. these are concept that the titans don't understand and they feared for their very existence. so they fled the planet as fast as they could, leaving behind half completed projects to destroy the world. they also could not simply destroy azeroth for fear of destroying the very thing that might someday "cure" them. so they just boogied out and left a bunch of powerful beings to watch the world while they observe the planet from a safe distance and ponder their next move. someday, i think they will return. but not to help the planet... but rather to destroy it for the sake of order.
Andrew Feb 7th 2011 2:48AM
I would disagree, because the Titans didn't leave with any half-finished plans really. They created the titanic watchers; they created the dragon aspects; they created new Earthen and other constructs resistant to the Curse of Flesh; and they created rather spectacular prisons to house the Old Gods and keep them in check. If they had been in the process of destroying Azeroth, it seems they went to a lot of trouble creating beings and objects meant to last for a very long time.
Also, what makes you think the Titans have no concept of free will or the desire to survive? Their basic constructs might not have these, but just because my computer doesn't have free will doesn't mean the person who designed it didn't.
Boozard Feb 7th 2011 3:38AM
well first... there is nothing to suggest that the beings created by the titans are unique in the universe. and so dragons, watchers and what-not may have been created long before they even came into azeroth with the exception of perhaps the aspects which are suppose to be manifestations of the titans themselves. also, the concept of time for truly immortal beings who have lived billions and billions of millenia may just be different from how we view time. what may look like relics that are meant to last forever to us are actually disposable objects to them. even the process of destroying azeroth may have been a million year process that was ultimately interrupted because the titans had to leave. they just left guardians to look after their projects as they ponder their next move.
second, the fact that the titans go about the universe "fixing" things for eternity hints that perhaps they are incapable of doing anything else. think of it... sargeras was right to an extent... it's a pointless and ultimately futile exercise. so why do it? maybe it's because they have no choice. free will by it's very definition entails some amount of uncertainty and unpredictability... 2 elements that the very concept of order opposes. if the titans are the ultimate representation of order, then it may be very well be possible that they in fact have no free will.
Andrew Feb 7th 2011 2:42AM
A farmer hoping for a crop does not plow a field and then plant one seed. He tills the earth and plants many seeds so that at least some of them will grow into plants bearing fruit.
I agree with a previous commenter, there's no reason to think Azeroth is unique in its being a breeding ground for possible Sargeras killers. Why risk creating a limited number of superweapons when you can put a superweapon into each plant you create? Algalon has had to reoriginate other planets, presumably ones that have not been corrupted by Old Gods (but who knows what other forms of corruption might have taken hold on them), so why would he have had to otherwise? Perhaps the contents of these other worlds had never been challenged and therefore never developed past the level of the Earthen and the various other constructs on Azeroth. Perhaps these planets were reoriginated not because they had gone wrong, but because they hadn't gone wrong enough. They were reoriginated not to cleanse the planets, but to reset them just as any researcher might reset a modeling simulator to try for another outcome.
Except with Azeroth. Because of the Curse of Flesh, because of the hazards of the Old Gods, we had become corrupted and at the same time MORE than perfect. We are capable of the order and logic of the Titans who created us, but thanks to our corruption, we wield freewill and the capacity for chaos and illogic, things the Titans may not themselves be able to safely grasp (look at what happened to Sargeras). But whether or not the Titans someday come to view us as 'too powerful,' I doubt they'd have any real reason to fear us. The inhabitants of Azeroth, native and immigrant, mostly fight outsiders for the protection of the whole world. Once the galactic threats have been dealt with, Alliance and Horde will gladly resume pummeling each other to death.
Maelztrom Feb 7th 2011 3:51AM
Mind = Blown
kebosangar Feb 7th 2011 5:15AM
"What we are is the Titans' version of biological warfare, a planet of tiny, unassuming creatures that have been created, ordered, and bred to defeat the greatest evil that has ever threatened the universe " Haha, I love that idea.
Bulbasaur Feb 7th 2011 5:59AM
We already defeated Sargeras in the War of The Ancients. Doesn't seem so hard if you can hurt him with a magical wooden axe... AND THE FURY OF A SAURFANG!.
Carlos Feb 7th 2011 6:02AM
I thought about something very similar to this. The way I roleplay my paladin, I take alot of inspiration from the anime/manga series Biobooster Armor: The Guyver. Long story short, in that series, some aliens created humans as weapons, but feared their creations when they went out of control and left Earth for good. When I was going through some of the WoW lore, I saw a very similar story.
But I don't think that we were created by the Titans to defeat the Burning Legion and clean up their mess with Sargeras. Instead, I think Azeroth is their ace in the hole for a bigger conflict that we have not seen yet...the intergalatic war between Creation and Destruction, the war between the Titans and the creatures we have come to know as Old Gods.
Let's look at some key facts. The Naaru themselves had a prison dungeon known as The Arcatraz. We know they captured a particular prison, Harbinger Skyriss, whom appears to be a Qiraji bug. When engaged, Skyriss proclaims, "It is a small matter to control the mind of the weak... for I bear allegiance to powers untouched by time, unmoved by fate. No force on this world or beyond harbors the strength to bend our knee... not even the mighty Legion!" So from this sentence, and the fact that the Qiraji of Silithus are under C'Thun's control, we can deduce that Skyriss most likely works for the forces of the Old Gods. Here is where it gets interesting though:
When Skyriss uses his ability to duplicate himself he shouts out, "We span the universe, as countless as the stars!" Clearly he is not talking about the Old Gods themselves, but about his race, the bug people of the Qiraji. So this little tidbit of information brings up some more questions. The Naaru have had little interaction with the races of Azeroth apart from the war front in Outland, and the dying M'uru within the Sunwell Plateau. So where did the Naaru pick up the vile creature Harbinger Skyriss?
My theory is that the Qiraji are not native to Azeroth, but are in fact, the Old Gods version of the Titans' seed races. These Old God creatures move from world to world and spread the Qiraji like a virus. The Nerubians of Northrend, while supposedly being a sister race branched off from the Qiraji, fall back into their roots of Old God worship by aligning themselves with Yogg-Saron. Then there are the "Faceless Ones", who also do not have any history or origins on Azeroth, but seem to pop up wherever Old God activity finds itself. So there we have 2-3 different Old God races designed to terraform a planet for their use. The bug people of the Qiraji swarm the planet, kill everything they can, while the Faceless creatures employ telepathy and madness to drive the more powerful creatures of the planet totally insane to where they either worship the Old Gods, or destroy themselves so as not to pose a threat to the Old Gods' existence.
Enter Deathwing. He created the Demon Soul under the madness of the Old Gods who had corrupted him. The Old Gods, used the War of the Ancients as a catalyst to put a plan into motion that would unchain them from the earth far below. Again, what Skyriss said must be true (because this is compounding evidence), in his statement of not even the Burning Legion having the resources to stop the Old Gods. So they knew even if Sargeras came to their little planet and invaded, that once they were free, they would rip through his armies and tear the demon leader limb from limb. Because, if they thought they were going to die or lose that fight, why not just stay chained to the planet?
So let's jump over to Algaon for a moment...his first words after his defeat are, "I have seen worlds bathed in the Makers' flames. Their denizens fading without so much as a whimper." That is some pretty hardcore stuff. Look at all of nonsense going on in Azeroth right now. We've got corrupted and crazy Aspects, such as Malygos and Deathwing. We've got Old God corruption up and down the planet, slowly seeping through the cracks in the planet's crust. Then there's all the demonic and necromantic energy coming from warlocks and Lich Kings, not to mention even Malygos got fed up with seeing the magical leylines fluctuating because mortals were abusing the arcane magics. All of this, and the Titans did not come down to blow Azeroth to bits themselves, they sent Algalon in their stead, and that was only because we killed Loken. So what kind of nightmares could reside on the other worlds they fostered and cared for, only to go and blow the entire thing to smitherines? Obviously something greater than all of the junk going down here on Azeroth. My guess? Those planets had total Old God infestation from north pole to south pole.
Remember earlier how I said the Qiraji and the Faceless Ones were terraforming Azeroth for the Old Gods? Keep that in the back of your mind for a second. Let's look at what we know about the life of an Old God. They come to a planet through unknown methods and sink their tentacles into the dirt. From their they take control of the creatures living on it, including the elementals, and force them all to fight eachother. We know this for a fact, because it seems the only agenda of the Old Gods is complete chaos. But what if it isn't? All too many times, I have seen small children that have had little supervision, take their toys and violently pit them against eachother. With this in mind, is it not possible that the Old Gods on our planet, are in fact, children of their own species? Now what is really scary here is that if this is the case....children are usually much smaller in physical size when compared to their adult counterparts. Keep this in the back of your mind for a bit too, as I'll come back to it later. Myths and Legends say we have about 5 Old Gods on Azeroth. Let's assume for a second they didn't come here of their own free will, but were instead "seeded" onto the planet.
They've been merging themselves with Azeroth for some time, and that is the supposed reason the Titans didn't want to blow the planet up in the first place. My speculation is that regard, more like the human reproductive system. They all get in and see who can penetrate the planet first, consuming it's natural resources in the process, and absorbing it's brothers afterwards. A sort of survival of the fittest kind of gig. So what happens if one of these Old God seedlings takes over a planet? More than likely the planet itself becomes part of the Old God's body, a self-sufficient eco system of slimey, slithering nastiness...that then creatures more "Old God babies" and sends them off to new planets where the process can be repeated.
Now are you ready for your minds to be blown?!
I believe at the center of the WoW universe (figuratively speaking), there is a grand daddy Old God creature that does the same thing every Old God creature does, in that absorbs it's own kind to grow and become more powerful. So when one of these planet sized Old God things does fully develop, it makes it's way back to the daddy creature that swallows it up. This could even explain why Sargeras thought the universe was chaotic and evil as a default, not because it was the ebb and flow of the universe, but because a giant, unimaginable evil lurks out there somewhere and it corrupts everything.
So let's go back to Deathwing for a moment. He was corrupted by a (or multiple) Old God(s), and if my theory is correct, they were just children with toys. If they can have that kind of influence on a creature as powerful as one of the Titans hand picked Aspects...is it not conceivable that this Old God hivemind would have the power to corrupt a Titan? So what if Sargeras' madness was not linked to just depression, but to massive Old God mind control and manipulation?
The final mission is not to stop Sargeras, much as our goal is not to stop at Deathwing's defeat. We have to get in there and nip the problem in the bud. I fully believe that Azeroth was chosen as one of (if not the only) worlds that the Titans created with the specific task of creating a super weapon to deal with their Old God problem. Someone mentioned an immune system earlier. Right now, we are being trained like an immune system. The Old Gods infesting Azeroth now are bound and weakened thanks to the Titans, but as we have seen, they are not going to stay bound forever. This is intentional, after all. The Titans wanted the Old Gods to slowly break free with time, to make their precence known to the denizens of Azeroth. Why? Because the Old Gods on this planet are nothing but a vaccine. They are weakened viruses that the Titans left behind, so we could destroy them and in the process, like the human immune system, learn what makes them tick so we can kill them more efficiently.
Grimmwrath Feb 7th 2011 6:05AM
One of the best Know Your Lore articles I've read. I don't know how you guys piece this all together, but keep doing it!
Eldoron Feb 7th 2011 6:58AM
Strange.... I think it was in another TFH that us killing the Old Gods does in fact harm to Azeroth... so maybe it's not so super-cool that we're fighting against them, and maybe once we'll see the drawbacks of it on Azeroth. And then we won't be the über-soldiers of the Titans but struggling little creatures.
Tripleb Feb 7th 2011 8:22AM
Maybe the titans cant directly kill another titan. So Sargeras has to form an army big enough to kill a titan and the titans need to create a powerful enough army to kill Sargeras.
Henri Poincaré Feb 7th 2011 8:38AM
Did we really kill Old Gods? I think we really kill some part of them, say, the eye, the brain, whatever is exposed on the surface, so to speak. As powerful as mortal heroes are, we always face these super-beings somehow weakened: they have been summoned too soon, to quote a beloved villain from lvl60 endgame. This is fine, since it would otherwise make no sense that we can stand up to them. But it also means that we cannot really stand up to something like a Titan or an Old God in full form and full powers and prevail, or indeed survive.
matt Feb 7th 2011 9:20AM
sooner or later the great battle that pits us against sargaras and the BL will occur on azeroth, perhaps the titans will come to aid us. My guess is that after we defeat the legion, the titans will become concerned by the immense power and unpredictable nature of their "weapon" (us). That sets up the final battle of wow that pits us against the titans as they try to eliminate what is now the most potent force in the universe.
One wonders if that battle will occur in wow or be part of the "titan" project that appeared on blizzard's timeline of future projects.
Xantenise Feb 7th 2011 9:47AM
We need more TFH! This stuff is mind blowing!
Phantom Feb 7th 2011 10:33AM
This seems like a ton of work just to get us to kill Sargeras. Did they consider just linking his drop list in Trade Chat?
Plainswander Feb 7th 2011 1:23PM
I am amazed nobody has come to the "babylon 5" conclusion yet.
We're not just going to take down the legion, we're going to take down the titans too. Buncha high and mighty lords of order running around forcing their "grand plan" on to all of creation? I think not, not anymore anyway, we'll have our own destiny, thankyouverymuch.
VegetaPrime Feb 7th 2011 3:24PM
I like this idea a lot. Fans of the original Marvel Comics run of Transformers will recognize the same idea. In that universe, Primus, the creator of the transformers and a god much in the same vein of the Titans (they organized the universe basically) created the Cybertronians to defeat the Chaos Bringer Unicron and then carry on after his demise. I'm really surprised I hadn't made out the resemblance before. Great article!