Know Your Lore, Infinite Paths: The golden-eyed

Last week, I talked about Murozond and the End Time. Some astute readers noted that upon confronting the players and Nozdormu, Murozond claims, "I have witnessed the true End Time. This? This is a blessing you simply cannot comprehend." What does this mean, exactly? Granted, we could simply dismiss this as insanity brought on by the Old Gods. But what if the issue isn't insanity? What if the Old Gods didn't drive Murozond mad at all?
Aman'Thul, the Highfather of the Titanic Pantheon, granted Nozdormu a vision of his own death. It is said to be this very fate that Murozond is attempting to avoid by fracturing time. What, however, if that's not the case at all? What if in his case, much madness was and is divine sense?
Murozond's End - End TimeNozdormu: At last it has come to pass. The moment of my demise. The loop is closed. My future self will cause no more harm from this day on.
Nozdormu: Still, in the future, I will... fall to madness. And you, heroes... will vanquish me. The cycle will repeat. So it goes.
Nozdormu: What matters is that Azeroth did not fall; that humanity survived to live another day.
Nozdormu: All that matters... is this moment.
Why does Murozond call out to Aman'Thul in his moment of death? Beyond his own death, what has Murozond seen? Did the Infinite Dragonflight seek to break this clockwork universe, and if so, has it already done so? This week's KYL continues based on last week's Tinfoil Hat Edition and presents an entire alternate time line based on the question What if Murozond was the hero all along?
Bronze hide, golden eyes
To really understand the difficulty in untangling Murozond's intentions and Nozdormu's assumptions, we first must look at the time line Murozond was preventing us from accessing.
Specifically, Murozond didn't want players to go back in time to the battle between the Burning Legion and the ancient kaldorei and the dragon aspects at the Well of Eternity. Why? Why did it matter to the master of the Infinite Dragonflight if we went back to the Well, especially since once we get there, we find no Infinite Dragons are there at all? Yes, Nozdormu says his future self will cause no harm from the moment we slay him on. But time travel being what it is, Murozond could easily have secured his dragonflight into the time of the Well before his death. He does not. And this reminds us of the other time we're sent by the Bronze Dragonflight to a time period only to discover there are no Infinites present at all -- namely, the Battle for Mount Hyjal.
The Bronze Dragonflight gathers an army of heroes and sends them back in time to prevent the Infinites from interfering. Those heroes never encounter a single Infinite. They do, however, ensure that Archimonde is defeated by the destruction of Nordrassil, exactly on schedule. And this leads me to wonder: What if Murozond, instead of trying to kill player characters and Thrall throughout his attacks on the past, was trying to shepherd them?
Nozdormu, having only seen End Time from his own perspective and that of the vision shown him by Aman'Thul, cannot understand it as Murozond does. Murozond has been Nozdormu. Nothing Nozdormu can do can surprise him. What if rather than fallen to insanity (as Nozdormu assumes), Murozond is instead living up to Aman'Thul's vision for him? What if he very deliberately created the Infinites, shattered the timeways, and orchestrated his own death at his own hands to fulfill his role and create the time line that we now exist in?
What Nozdormu sees as madness (a deliberate attempt to change history) becomes divinest sense when Murozond does it in order to prevent the victory of the Old Gods. Nozdormu's first step along that path that will lead to his death is when he leads heroes to the End Time and kills himself in order that he might go back in time and alter history just as Murozond would.
Closed loops open again
When Murozond dies, Nozdormu has become Murozond.
When Nozdormu sends us back to the Well, he is acting as Murozond would. Nozdormu blindly protects time's sanctity. Murozond actively alters it. Why? Because a timeline left to its own devices would head to the true End Time, the ultimate victory of the Old Gods. We have never lived in the real time line. That time line was altered, changed, warped and shifted by the Infinites, working under Murozond's directions.
The time storm that attacked Nozdormu and sent Rhonin, Krasus and Broxigar back to the War of the Ancients was nothing more than a smokescreen intended to give everyone a false impression. Malfurion was never intended to be the Shan'do of the kaldorei, and Illidan was never intended to be the sorcerer. And Tyrande Whisperwind was never to be the hand on the reins of the kaldorei.
Azshara was.
Azshara and Illidan had very different lives and upbringings. Azshara was born royalty, the direct scion of thousands of years of kaldorei rulership, while Illidan was effectively a peasant, born to the to-that-point-unremarkable Stormrage lineage. Azshara was from birth given every advantage, treated like the future queen she was, while Illidan had to claw and scratch for every bit of recognition he got, not just in general but in direct conflict against his twin brother Malfurion. Azshara loved herself and her own perfection, while Illidan obsessed over Tyrande and sought perfection in order to attain her.
The Warcraft Encyclopedia - Illidan Stormrage & Queen Azshara entries
Yet Illidan was talented at sorcery, which at the time was a staple of night elf society. His magical abilities were cold comfort, though, for he had been born with golden eyes, which were quite rare in night elves before the Sundering. Golden eyes were thus commonly regarded as a sign of future greatness, but Illidan showed no signs of achieving anything out of the ordinary. Little did Illidan know that his eyes actually indicated strong druidic potential.
Queen Azshara was born with golden eyes, which were quite rare in night elves before the Great Sundering. Thus, golden eyes were commonly regarded as a sign of future greatness.
Yet both Illidan and Azshara were born supremely gifted in one key way: Both were born with the golden eyes that bespoke greatness to their people. They shared an affinity with the arcane that marked them as superlative spellcasters, greater even than Xavius or the other Highborne. Azshara was so powerful even Mannoroth couldn't harm her, while Illidan defeated every demon that ever put itself in front of him. Their great power and great destinies ended up turned against one another, and their people paid the price. Yet this price? It was the means by which the world was ultimately saved from the Legion as well as the Old Gods.
Crowns of endless glory trod under abhorrent feet
Imagine if Azshara had come to Cenarius. Imagine Azshara, Queen of the World, Light of Lights, training at the hooves of Cenarius, son of Elune. Imagine if the beloved one had turned to her people and spoken of abandoning the Well. Imagine a druid world empire, ruled by a benevolent dictator who turned her people away from arcane magic. (It's possible that Azshara could have found in the entire world of Azeroth and the Emerald Dream beyond and behind it a contentment to match her personal greatness.)
Illidan, with his enormous potential and no rivalry with Malfurion to force his hand, rises to be Archdruid of this society perfectly in tune with nature. With no one tapping the Well, there's no need to hide its power from the Legion. There's no new Well created, no Nordrassil, no pact with the dragon aspects. Azshara rules a long but mortal reign and dies beloved by her people, as does Archdruid Illidan.
For that matter, could even Illidan Stormrage maintain his obsessive love for his brother's beloved in the face of an Azshara who was neither vain nor self-absorbed, one who had found her calling and her mission in life? Or would he have served her as dilligently as Xavius or Varo'then had, but with the shared knowledge of Cenarius' teaching to keep both balanced and sane?
And so, in 9,000 years, when the forces of C'thun boil out of the titanic ruins now called Ahn'Qiraj, there is no battle-hardened warrior druid to stand against them, for Fandral Staghelm, Karsis, is dead. Illidan dead, Azshara dead, Malfurion, Tyrande, Shandris Feathermoon, Maiev, none of them ever became immortal. Without access to arcane magic and no threats in their eternally perfect empire of natural balance, no ancient and terrible catastrophe and no almost lost war with the Burning Legion to harden and prepare them, the night elves fall before the Qiraji. C'thun's forces begin their march on the Caverns of Time, where the Bronze Dragonflight battles along against an army that nearly defeated three dragonflights and the night elf armies.
A monster he was lest monsters destroy us all
This is the secret Murozond knows, the true End Time for Azeroth. And it happened 1,000 years ago. If Azshara and Illidan were allowed to have their peaceful, enlightened, untainted histories, the world itself would end, split in half to free itself from itself, perhaps. This is what Murozond saw in his moment of madness, when he split the timeways and learned the true meaning of Aman'Thul's vision for him. That he was never meant to simply behave as time's warden, keeping it locked free from interference. No, he was to be time's gardener and root out the rot the Old Gods would inflict in their effort to force time to chaotic stagnation. His was to pull out the weeds, and he knew (because he had just experienced it) that in order to come to this realization, he would have to see himself die.
Murozond did what he had to do. Murozond died that the Old Gods' rule would never come to pass again. Murozond died to prevent the End Time. And so, Murozond lives on exactly as long as we do. It was Murozond who made it possible for Xavius to reach Sargeras, who kept Azshara and Illidan isolated from those who might have reached them, who manipulated Malfurion and Tyrande into inflaming Illdan's jealousy. He sabotaged an eden and warped two souls into parodies of their own potential greatness for fear of where that greatness led, feeling that a world in conflict would be a better crucible for heroes fit to stand against the end -- the kind that could storm his own bastion and slay him.
Next week, why Orgrimmar needs to burn.
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: Analysis / Opinion, Lore, Know your Lore, Cataclysm
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Reader Comments (Page 3 of 5)
Plainswander Nov 23rd 2011 4:47PM
I WANT BE PLAYING ROSSI'S GAME.
that is all.
trefpoid Nov 23rd 2011 4:54PM
Stop mindblowing me every week please, there's so much one can take before dying from so much awesome tinfoil lore D:
Melvyl Nov 23rd 2011 4:59PM
"Ah, there you are. I had hoped to accomplish this with a bit of subtlety, but I suppose direct confrontation was inevitable. Your future, Thrall, must not come to pass and so...you and your troublesome friends must die!" - If Epoch Hunter was a hero, he needed to work on his inspirational speeches.
Blayze Nov 23rd 2011 5:01PM
It's just the sort of cliched comment that someone playing the part of a bad guy would come up with.
Reanne Nov 23rd 2011 5:00PM
Anyone else notice this:
Murozond
Nozdormu
they have the same letters just in different places
SR Nov 23rd 2011 8:43PM
OMFG NO WAY YOU HAVE THE HIGHEST PERCEPTION OF EVERYONE ON THIS ENTIRE SITE
I SHALL NAME MY FIRSTBORN CHILD AFTER YOU
ALL HAIL THE PERCEPTIVE, ALL HAIL THE OMNISCIENT, ALL HA....
Ok, I'm done with my dickery for now. Proceed.
Killik Nov 24th 2011 6:36AM
It's a retro-troll!
Ilmyrn Nov 23rd 2011 5:05PM
Assuming this KYL is right, one wonders why Nozdormu didn't just pop in on himself and say, "Hey Past Nozdormu, this is Future Cyber-Nozdormu 20XX. Bad things go down in the future. Best get the chronal weedeater out of the temporal toolshed. PS: Please don't kill me.
Ilmyrn Nov 23rd 2011 5:08PM
Ah, less-than icon, you have failed me FOR THE LAST TIME!
Boobah Nov 23rd 2011 5:10PM
Of course, if the well hadn't been destroyed and the Maelstrom created, the Night Elves and the trolls would likely have continued warring, so it's not as if the elves would've had less to fight with, especially since the center of their empire hadn't been blown to flinders.
And the Humans, and Gnomes, and Dwarves were all hitting the world stage around then, which likely would have put more pressure on at least the Amani and Gurubashi empires, freeing up some of the Kaldorei forces to attend to the Qiraji.
Also, without the threat of the demons, it seems terribly likely that Pandaria would never have been lost behind the Mists. While the Pandarens might never have needed to mellow out in reaction to the Sha, they still wouldn't have found the Qiraji friendly neighbors.
And then there's the not-so-minor issue that Deathwing wouldn't have had the opportunity to craft the Dragon Soul and earn his name, although rallying the dragonflights against the Qiraji might have made a good excuse. But could he have concealed his corruption, as well as that of his flight, for the extra millenia?
Of course, just because Azshara turned away from the arcane doesn't mean that all the kaldorei would do so; after all, neither Sunstrider's rebels nor the researchers of Eldre'thalas did even with the example of the Sundering. And until the demons came, it's not likely that those with skill in the arcane would have given it up. Or maybe never; it would've been far more difficult for the invasion to take place at all without Azshara's sponsorship.
Finally, the timeline doesn't mesh well, since Brox and company didn't even show up to mess with stuff until after Illidan and Azshara were neck deep in the arcane. It's stretching pretty far to see any way the time travelers' absence would lead Cenarius to meet Azshara before Xavius introduced her to Sargeras and set the whole War of the Ancients in motion.
Hobstadt Nov 23rd 2011 6:51PM
Well, if there had been no Sundering, then there would have been no Highborne exiled to Quel'Thelas, and then no High Elves, which means that the Forest Trolls would have exterminated the Humans, since noone would be there to teach the Humans magic. That would also meant the death of the Orcs on Dreanor, since Medivh would never exist to contact Gul'dan and design the Dark Portal, so they would all eventually die from starvation on Hellfire Peninsula and in Shadowmoon Valley. And since no Orc (or Ogre)would go to Azeroth, there would be no destruction of Draenor by portals, and no Lich King or Scourge since Ner'Zhul would never leave Draenor, much less control the Horde in any way. Also, the Alliance would never come to Draenor, Illidan would be long-dead by that time, and the Blood Elves and the Naga would never have existed, so Velen and the Draenei would never have heard of Azeroth and would likely still be hiding on Draenor. And, also? No demons in the forests -> no Druids of the Fang to hunt them down -> no Worgen. (Even if there had been humans alive.) And no Forsaken ofc, since there would never have been any Humans or a Scourge, and Sylvanas would never have been born. Oh, and Deathwing? Likely still nuts, but he wouldn't have an opportunity to create the Demon Soul, since there wouldn't be an external threat that all flights combined needed to fight, and so he couldn't steal the power of all other dragons, and therefore would either still play nice and bide the time, or have gone all berzerk and have been taken out for good long ago. So, we are basically looking at an Azeroth with Night Elves, Trolls, Dwarves, Tauren, Gnomes, Goblins, Pandaren and a bunch of minor races. And ofc, there would never be a Horde or an Alliance, so maybe the factions would be Night Elves, Trolls and Tauren against Dwarves, Gnomes and Goblins with Pandaren as neutral race?
Callace Nov 23rd 2011 5:10PM
"Crowns of endless glory trod under abhorrent feet" You Sir, are a legitimate poet. Those dactyls are nigh perfect. I can only hope that a fraction of your readership appreciates this.
paul.morales91 Nov 23rd 2011 5:14PM
Mind = Blown. I am left extremely confused, and yet, it all makes perfect sense. Brilliant job Matt. Not even Anne has made me think like this. Bravo, good sir.
"Next week, why Orgrimmar needs to burn."
As a pretty dedicated Alliance fan and self-proclaimed lore nerd, this. A thousand times this.
Ilmyrn Nov 23rd 2011 5:16PM
You know, I really hope we actually get to SAVE Nozdormu eventually. It sucks constantly having to kill awesome characters, and it'd be nice to have a happy ending for once.
As for paradoxes, who cares? The timeline seems to be holding up all right DESPITE all the history changing that's happened. Might as well do some more meddling, but intentionally for once.
markfeliciano Nov 23rd 2011 5:27PM
I can't really comment much about the whole Night Elf thing with Azshara and Illidan, I do have to say you're line of thinking about why the infinites are disrupting the timeways to weaken the world in a sense.
Think about it. Each of the dungeons in Caverns of Time has been to remove important events that would strengthen the world. For example, the first dungeon "Escape from Durnholde Keep". If Thrall was killed, the Horde would have never risened to it's current glory. Battle hardened warriors wouldn't have been created. The eastern kingdom's would become stagnant and weak, easily suspectible to the Burning Legion's destructive path effectively bringing about Azeroth's end. They would have won pretty much.
Even better, the Opening of the Dark Portal. It would have brought on the same effect. No wars equal a weak world with a populace unable to effectively defend itself.
The same with the Culling of Stratholme. With Arthas dead, the Undead Scourge would probably be a meager mass of mindless drones without it's famous Death Knight to lead the charge and execute the Lich King's plans. With that result the undead invasion would have ended in failure. No esteemed warriors rising up to the challenge.
Maybe this was Murozond's plan. To weaken the world to make his Endtime easier to accomplish. But why would Murozond want an Azeroth filled with weak heroes and adventurers?
Here's my tinfoil hat, one that I wanted to say for a while since the last topic:
The real Endtime. Not of Azeroth, but the Universe. A mass legion of Humans, Orcs, Night Elves, Tauren, Forsaken and on and on. All corrupted, insane and powerful beyond measure. Spreading terror and madness across the universe. So empowered that not even the Titan's themselves can stop them. The Burning Legion would pale in comparison and make Sargeras look like a small child in their might. Bringing about an eternity for all life in the universe filled with violence, death and madness. Everything would be just a toy for the Old Gods.
But that's just my theory.
markfeliciano Nov 23rd 2011 5:46PM
Just to add to my theory, think about the fight with the Lich King. He risked absolutely everything just to get his hands on us. He would have been killed had he not used every bit of strength he had. By sending his armies, he tempered us like a blade, all with the plan to create the greatest fighting force ever. He knew the value of Azeroth's adventurers and in his mind it was a risk worth taking.
Nalk Nov 23rd 2011 5:50PM
its always the time mysteries that get me, so many paradoxes and such
just wow man
if i had any thought of wow being simple in story, those were completely erased,
i would love to see why orgimmar must burn
RMac Nov 23rd 2011 6:00PM
Well written article, as usually. I am left puzzled again.
On a side-note: now just imagine yourself, as someone being able to witness the events of every timeline, having a shared conciousness in every quantum universe; that is an immense amount of information to handle, could you live up to it? It is no wonder that it took Nozdormu's sanity.
On the other hand, I am saddened by how little amount of interest does Blizzard show for this branch of the story- Of course, they question remains, was this their plan all along, to let us (via Anne and Matt) discover the (plausible) truth behind Muruzond's acts? Twisted, eh?
Aucald Nov 23rd 2011 6:04PM
Liked the article, though sometimes I think that it isn't Murozond/Nozdormu pulling the strings in this nested collection of tangent timeways and diverging paradoxes. I've never been able to bring myself to completely trust the Titans since Ulduar and Algalon's pronouncement that he had seen countless lives consumed by the Maker's flames. Somehow, I can't help feeling that the Titans' "vision" for Azeroth and the universe in general might end up being no better for the sentient races than the Old Gods' machinations. If the Old Gods represent destructive, primordial chaos then it may be that the Titans represent a stringent order in which nothing can truly live with free will.
Syrendipity Nov 25th 2011 7:15AM
My feeling on this is that Anne and Matt are getting dangerously close to the truth. My only addition to it is that this isnt the first time that Azeroth has existed. Going on from Aucald's quote 'Algalon's pronouncement that he had seen countless lives consumed by the Maker's flames'. To which I affer up the following scenario.
What if, the old gods were beating the titans across the cosmos. Corrupting planets faster then the Titans could cleanse them, in an endless game of hit and run.
What if the Legion was just a diversion by the old gods to keep the Titans occupied and the titans finally sensing it decieded to do something about it. To their order based minds, why fight the war on multiple fronts, when it could be possible to only fight it on one.
What if Azeroth was created purely to lure the old gods. ie create a planet so awesomely brimming with power that they couldnt resist. Like roaches to a feast they swarmed Azeroth only to find themselves trapped in one place. Unable to interfere with anything beyond azeroth, it is giving the titans a chance to clear up the back log.
However what if in the first attempt the old gods came so close to breaking free that Algalon flicked the switch to produce Azeroth 2.0 The titans now realising that they had to be more careful this time created more checks and balances including the 5 aspects, and specifically gave the Bronze flight the task of making sure that when the endgame comes, the peoples of Azeroth would stand shoulder to shoulder battle hardend and willing to fight.