Garrosh Hellscream: Then and now

The full blue post after the break.
Fortified citadels lie in ruins. Once-verdant forests burn brightly in the twilight of the setting sun. And arid stretches of desert, known to have claimed even the hardiest of travelers, now house fertile oases.
The breaking of Azeroth changed a great many things. While the altered landscapes of the Eastern Kingdoms and Kalimdor may be the most noticeable evidence of Deathwing's violent return, many of Azeroth's heroes have also undergone drastic physical and mental transformations of their own.
Some have questioned Thrall's decision to set Garrosh Hellscream into the fiery crucible of Horde leadership, but none can doubt that this Mag'har orc from Outland has charted a course for his people that will change the very face of Azeroth.
As the son of the orc credited with his people's redemption, Garrosh Hellscream has always carried a bitter mantle of duty to his kind. Before learning of his father's ultimate actions against the Burning Legion, Garrosh had borne the shame of Grom Hellscream's corruption and feared that such weakness might be found within himself. When Thrall arrived in Nagrand and showed Garrosh the truth of his father's martyrdom, the Mag'har was transformed. Filled with a renewed sense of strength and confidence, he returned with the warchief to Azeroth to be his advisor. Soon named overlord of the Warsong offensive, Garrosh displayed a courage, tenacity, and hot-bloodedness that both impressed and worried other members of the Horde. These concerns were only heightened after his appointment as warchief, as Garrosh has paid little heed to opinions originating outside of his race.
Hellscream's ascension has been applauded by most orcs, who feel that his brash warrior instincts and unwillingness to negotiate for needed resources are more in tune with the true orc way. While Garrosh appreciates public recognition, even relishes the acceptance amongst these green-skinned orcs, he has little time or patience for ostentatious displays of leadership. His attention is now focused on strengthening the walls of Orgrimmar and providing supplies vital to his people: food, lumber, and the other essentials for living, which are growing scarcer in the recent drought. If these can only be gained through the blood of selfish Alliance dogs, so be it.
Already distrustful of the other branches of the Horde, Garrosh has learned that the various leaders of these factions are more powerful than he had originally estimated. The duel with (and eventual slaying of) High Chieftain Cairne Bloodhoof was costly, as it resulted in a civil war amongst the tauren. The exodus of the Darkspear trolls from Orgrimmar, led by a dissatisfied Vol'jin, has spread the Horde's once-concentrated military mighty thin. And Sylvanas Windrunner, the Dark Lady of the Forsaken, has not been reserved in sharing her low opinion of the new warchief. Garrosh is not one for diplomacy-with the Alliance or even among the members of the Horde-and he is only now realizing the price for this mindset. Whether he sets that at a higher value than his vision for an invigorated, purified Horde is yet to be seen. In the end, some feel that Garrosh Hellscream's ideals will bring about the salvation of the Horde, while others feel he will usher in its downfall.
We'll be examining other key characters' transformations-including those of Anduin Wrynn and Magni Bronzebeard-in the months ahead, so come back soon.
The breaking of Azeroth changed a great many things. While the altered landscapes of the Eastern Kingdoms and Kalimdor may be the most noticeable evidence of Deathwing's violent return, many of Azeroth's heroes have also undergone drastic physical and mental transformations of their own.
Some have questioned Thrall's decision to set Garrosh Hellscream into the fiery crucible of Horde leadership, but none can doubt that this Mag'har orc from Outland has charted a course for his people that will change the very face of Azeroth.
As the son of the orc credited with his people's redemption, Garrosh Hellscream has always carried a bitter mantle of duty to his kind. Before learning of his father's ultimate actions against the Burning Legion, Garrosh had borne the shame of Grom Hellscream's corruption and feared that such weakness might be found within himself. When Thrall arrived in Nagrand and showed Garrosh the truth of his father's martyrdom, the Mag'har was transformed. Filled with a renewed sense of strength and confidence, he returned with the warchief to Azeroth to be his advisor. Soon named overlord of the Warsong offensive, Garrosh displayed a courage, tenacity, and hot-bloodedness that both impressed and worried other members of the Horde. These concerns were only heightened after his appointment as warchief, as Garrosh has paid little heed to opinions originating outside of his race.
Hellscream's ascension has been applauded by most orcs, who feel that his brash warrior instincts and unwillingness to negotiate for needed resources are more in tune with the true orc way. While Garrosh appreciates public recognition, even relishes the acceptance amongst these green-skinned orcs, he has little time or patience for ostentatious displays of leadership. His attention is now focused on strengthening the walls of Orgrimmar and providing supplies vital to his people: food, lumber, and the other essentials for living, which are growing scarcer in the recent drought. If these can only be gained through the blood of selfish Alliance dogs, so be it.
Already distrustful of the other branches of the Horde, Garrosh has learned that the various leaders of these factions are more powerful than he had originally estimated. The duel with (and eventual slaying of) High Chieftain Cairne Bloodhoof was costly, as it resulted in a civil war amongst the tauren. The exodus of the Darkspear trolls from Orgrimmar, led by a dissatisfied Vol'jin, has spread the Horde's once-concentrated military mighty thin. And Sylvanas Windrunner, the Dark Lady of the Forsaken, has not been reserved in sharing her low opinion of the new warchief. Garrosh is not one for diplomacy-with the Alliance or even among the members of the Horde-and he is only now realizing the price for this mindset. Whether he sets that at a higher value than his vision for an invigorated, purified Horde is yet to be seen. In the end, some feel that Garrosh Hellscream's ideals will bring about the salvation of the Horde, while others feel he will usher in its downfall.
We'll be examining other key characters' transformations-including those of Anduin Wrynn and Magni Bronzebeard-in the months ahead, so come back soon.
More lore is good lore, I say! Garrosh's transformation over time has been a sore spot for many people, but it's been a necessary one to move Thrall out of the Horde and into the greater WoW universe. Time will tell what direction Blizzard is taking with Garrosh, but the new, aggressive Horde is definitely a great instigator for conflict in many of the supposedly safe areas of Azeroth. Watching these characters progress only makes me more excited for the new patches furthering Cataclysm's story.
WoW Patch 4.1 is on the PTR, and WoW Insider has all the latest news for you -- from previews of the revamped Zul'Aman and Zul'Gurub to new valor point mechanics and new archaeology items.
Filed under: Cataclysm






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 5)
Xabidar Apr 14th 2011 7:14PM
Still don't like him. =/
Nolls74 Apr 14th 2011 8:24PM
steroids. wheres the Feds when you need em? Who cares about barry bonds. Time to put Garrosh under the microscope.
Dreyja Apr 15th 2011 1:01AM
I honestly hope for you that he DOES come back. If his destiny is what they have hinted at then I doubt it. AS with the people who hope that Magni will be back, I say - look at the faction-balance, alas. :(
Dreyja Apr 15th 2011 2:17AM
Thrall I mean. /derp
Twill Apr 15th 2011 3:06AM
I wouldn't like Sylvanas either, but she has some flare to her cookery.
(Cookery was not a typo, btw.)
iwubyou Apr 14th 2011 7:15PM
Garrosh Hellscream hates Troll people.
Yanex Apr 16th 2011 10:45AM
Doesnt everyone?
jonblaze81 Apr 14th 2011 7:22PM
Don't blame me, I voted for a basic campfire!
NRD80Y Apr 15th 2011 4:06AM
Garrosh and one Basic Campfire's relatives use to hang out all the time in Nagrand :)
Garrosh Hellscream!
http://youtu.be/jYXYaVQX7LA
ElrithCC Apr 14th 2011 7:37PM
Garrosh was barely developed at a time when huge preconceived notions were all we had to go on. People love to hate something. Now that Garrosh is being fleshed out, the haters are a crying foul that he's being made to accommodate everyone.
When you look at what we have to go on in the microcosm of events that is the WOW lore, you can't really justify an opinion either way without injecting your own hypothesis.
Now that we have more to go on, it's obvious you're not supposed to hate Garrosh and think of him as a mindless tyrant or war monger, but people want to act like they had it pegged from the beginning and now things have been changed.
The fact is, there was just enough there that Blizzard gave us to kindle the debate in the first place, which is fun. It's just a shame some people make it personal.
Dreyja Apr 14th 2011 7:50PM
Because... emotionally connecting with the story is A. Bad. Thing? That could be the point.
For those of us that hate him, it's no more shallow than those who jumped on the "GRRRrr... ORC-SMASH! HORDE is BADASS AGAIN!" bandwagon. For those of us that have watched his quite closely this whole time may stand by our first impressions.
Come on. Give some of us credit that some of us DID read The Shattering and STILL think he's a gigantic, selfish, child. :)
I mean that in the nicest way possible. XD
Dreyja Apr 14th 2011 7:52PM
ugh... his STORY, watched his STORY closely.
:)
Drakkenfyre Apr 14th 2011 8:04PM
So somehow the quest or two that DOESN'T make him look like an idiotic, warmongering moron is supposed to change all of the OTHERS that do?
You do understand, right, that they have Horde NPC's also saying he's an idiotic warmonger, right? It's not a case of "we didn't have that much to go on." It's a case of "Blizzard writing him one way, and acknowledging it via NPC's."
Saurfang himself says "I won't let you take us down that path again. I will kill you myself before I let you do that."
So if he's suddenly supposed to be badass, and a good guy, not a idiot, and nice, why are the other NPC's also saying he doesn't know what he's doing?
lethian Apr 14th 2011 10:29PM
@ Drakkenfyre
and i quote: this is part way in but still
instead you laid waste to the land killed Innocents, children even. i spent a very long time in northrend Kromgar i learned much about the horde in that time.
next he says this:
"while there a wise old war hero told me something honor Kromgar no matter how dire the battle, never forsake it."
if im not mistaken those are the words of Saurfang as well. i could indeed be wrong, icc if im mistaken. ;)
lethian Apr 14th 2011 10:40PM
not mistaken* i think thats actually very adult and honorable personally, though i agree with dreyja its not bad to get emotionally involved or attached to a lore character its a story people have been getting attached to fictional character for ages
theRaptor Apr 14th 2011 10:37PM
@Elrith
At best he is a try hard, at worst he is a moronic barbarian that will bring the Horde back to the dark days of the Shadow Council.
I mean the "best" thing Garrosh has ever done was kill a Warlord who slaughtered women and children. Wow /golfclap. I mean it isn't like such a thing wasn't unconscionable under Thrall's reign or anything, and that Garrosh's "ME SMASH!" style leadership isn't responsible for the atrocity in the first place or anything. Every other thing he has done is to push the Horde closer to all out war with the Alliance which is incredibly stupid, lore wise, considering all the enemies that besiege Azeroth.
If Blizz want to make it Alliance vs Horde they need to make it believable and NOT have all these out side forces that previously united the two in a common cause. The current Alliance vs Horde is only believable in that both factions have retarded warmongering leaders who are begging for assassination (Which Vol'jin threatened to do).
At best Garrosh is pulling a "Dark Knight" and being the "bad ass" Warchief that people need right now.
theRaptor Apr 14th 2011 10:46PM
Oh and Garrosh's reason for getting pissed about when Kromgar accidentally the whole village is that it wasn't honourable. Not that it was evil, simply not honourable.
Maybe he would have been fine with it if they gave the Night Elf children weapons and fought Elf to Orc instead of dropping The Bombâ„¢ on them. 'cause there are plenty of other times when Garrosh exhorts you to commit genocide against the Alliance with the clear implication that non-combatants will suffer as a result of your actions (even if it is just starvation from you stealing all their food).
Meanwhile Thrall is off selflessly trying to prevent Azeroth imploding.
Dreyja Apr 14th 2011 11:12PM
May I just say:?
What Drakk said, and I hope that my inability to form a sentence tonight won't negatively influence his comments? Will it help if I say... he is smarter than me and is communicating exactly what I was saying, only BETTER??
Please?
I need to sleep. Sorry for linking my stupidity to your comments Drakk. ;)
Drakkenfyre Apr 14th 2011 11:50PM
Eh? Your comment wasn't stupid, Dreyja.
I was just echoing what you said, and adding the line by Saurfang. Anyone who thinks the percieved notion of Garrosh is simply based on the "limited information" we had of him in Wrath of the Lich King (which in itself is an error, he was barely there in Burning Crusade, Wrath of the Lich King is where he was fleshed-out) didn't read the NPC's who said they didn't like him, or the quest texts which also criticize him.
The OP is wrong. He wasn't "misjudged", Blizzard is setting him up to be a bad guy. They needed someone to stir the trouble up to put more tension between the factions, and they did. He will go back and forth, creating trouble for both factions, until he is probably absolutely hated by everyone except the diehard Horde fans who want nothng more than open war, then he will be made a raid boss.
lethian Apr 15th 2011 12:20AM
@ theRaptor,
that does not matter, were what 4 months into an expac that may last a year more, my point is you and everyone else is going from his past efforts, characters in all good stories have been known to change for the better or worse. My point is this, he was thralls choice and whether int he end its good or bad thrall had his reasons.
also the words moronic barbarian could be used for Varian who i also like