Aiding the Alliance: The idle Varian Wrynn

The Alliance faction leaders are simply ... boring. They don't do anything. They are tight springs of potential that are never given the opportunity to leap forth and act. What I've decided to do today is begin a series wherein I lay out what I as an Alliance player feel is lacking in my faction's heroes. There will be no faction fairness here, only what your average Alliance player sees, perceives and experiences and how I feel that can be improved.
Today we look at Varian Wrynn, King of Stormwind.
Who are you?
I love Varian Wrynn. I really do. In his current state, however, he's 100% pure wasted potential. He needs some serious help in a few key places.
First, looking strictly at World of Warcraft, we know absolutely nothing about him. He didn't appear in any of the previous games, either. This man's story, past and present, takes place entirely in extended media -- comics, novels, and so on. Who is he? Why does he deserve to be High King of the Alliance? Why does he deserve our respect? What sort of combat experience does he have? The Trials of the High King quest chain that was discussed at BlizzCon sounds cool and a very good way to get this information to players, but those Trials need to portray real, actual issues Varian is dealing with. Don't just give us Kill 10 Pigs, Kill 20 Cowpigs, Kill 30 Orcpigs. Show this man as someone who is wise and worthy to rule.
If the writers don't want Varian to be intelligent, give him the capability to know when he needs to call on people who are intelligent. Varian Wrynn's being able to say Tyrande, what's your take on this? is an admirable trait. Every leader needs to be able to do that. Varian's being boiled down to I will hit you with my sword so hard!! is not admirable whatsoever.

Speaking of hitting things with swords, can we deal with Varian's rage issues once and for all? Or find a better way to approach it? His anger management problems have been addressed at least three times in varying degrees. Back in the comic, everybody thought he would get better when he cobbled his two halves back together. That didn't do it. In his faction leader short story, we thought his self-realization about his problems would fix it. It didn't. In Wolfheart, he goes through a magical healing process. Will that fix it? Man, I hope so -- but didn't the Blood of Our Fathers short story take place after Wolfheart? So no, I guess even magical cleansing can't help Varian. How many more times do we need to go through this with him?
Seeing Varian pull himself out of his blinding rage only to fall back into it reminds me of an alcoholic -- and in fact, he is an alcoholic in Wolfheart, or at least a horrible drunkard.
Alcoholism is not heroic. Domestic abuse is not heroic. That's the kind of thing that darkens your opinion of a man forever. Anduin is an incredibly brave kid, getting himself away from Varian and departing for the Exodar. There is very little room for second chances when it comes to alcoholism and abuse, and it looks like Varian is on the road to needing his fourth and fifth chances. Just shelve that anger management thing. Give Varian the opportunity to make up for his mistakes and then it's dealt with, it's gone, just ... forget it. Don't turn our High King into a violent deadbeat. Characters like that have their place in fiction, but don't expect readers to respect those people, as we are expected to respect Varian.
Direct his rage at the Horde. Don't inflict it upon the Alliance, and certainly not his own son.
If the creators of this character see his rage issues as one of his defining traits and it's here to stay, he needs a foil. He needs a character at his side who can rein him in before things get bad. He needs a partner who can say Varian, cut that crap out! before he starts hitting people and spittling in their faces, and Varian needs to respect that person enough to listen to them. There is room for an angry, intense, kill-or-be-killed leader, especially when it's a character who has lost as much as Varian has in his lifetime, but he needs someone to play off of. For example ...

While Varian tells Jaina to stop crying and do something, she can tell him that ... sometimes it's okay to cry. Varian and Jaina wield great potential together. They'd become better people through one another's flaws, and they'd be a lot better off helping each other out.
Does their relationship need to be romantic? No, of course not. It could be, sure, but Varian and Jaina are old friends by now. They knew each other when they were kids. Varian was there in Lordaeron when Arthas and Jaina first met. After this many years seeing some seriously dark stuff together, it's perfectly reasonable to expect them to have built strong bonds between one another. Heck, until Genn Greymane resurfaced, Jaina and Varian were the final living rulers of the entire human race. That's significant.
Simple inaction
Varian Wrynn needs to go out into the world more. Again, Trials of the High King will help, but he needs to be more active in general. Garrosh, over the course of Cataclysm, has been out in the field dealing with his commanders and leading the assault on the Alliance. He's been active while the Horde is on the rise. Varian Wrynn, over the course of Cataclysm, stands in the remodeled Stormwind Keep, playing his fiddle while the Alliance burns around him.
Varian could meet Garrosh in battle in the Twilight Highlands. He could rescue Sentinel Hill and drive Vanessa VanCleef away. He could aid in fending off the orcs in Redridge. Varian's inaction in this expansion made signing up with Vanessa VanCleef seem like a damn good idea, because she's completely right. The Alliance is in a miserable state, humanity moreso than anybody else. Humanity, the backbone of the Alliance, seems on the brink of extinction. That's terrifying. Varian isn't doing anything about it but alienating his friends and family.
Go, Varian. Go and do.

I feel we also need to talk about Varian's imagery. Lo'gosh. The Ghost Wolf. Is that cool imagery? Yes. Is it contributing to the Alliance's dislike of Varian Wrynn and the perception of Horde favoritism? Yes. The Alliance looks at High King Lo'gosh and they think Oh jeez, Blizzard loves the Horde so much they're importing it to the Alliance now. Is that the truth? Of course not, but perception is perception. Our High King is being portrayed as an orc -- an orc-hating orc at that.
Thrall is very human, but his actions in support of the Horde speak volumes. As human as he is, Thrall is clearly orc at heart. Thrall built the Horde. Thrall was constantly working to rekindle what it means to be an orc. Varian can't say any of that. Varian doesn't have the swagger he needs to pull off the orcish human thing in the same way Thrall can pull off the opposite.
The Alliance has lacked a hero that has truly embodied the essence of what the Alliance is, humanity especially. The Alliance doesn't need a ghost wolf. Those great big pauldrons Varian wears? We need him to embody those: the lion and the eagle. If Varian can't do it, we need someone who can. As long as our High King is Lo'gosh the orcish human, Alliance players won't respect him. That's not who we are.
Varian suffers from the "world hero" concept that was outlined in a recent dev watercooler. It feels as if faction leaders and their story arcs tend to be written with the whole world in mind rather than one faction. That doesn't work in this game, and it will continue to not work. The game is set up with a clear division along faction lines. We are at war with the other team. If you don't pick a side, if you don't embody what your faction needs, you're nobody.
Neutral figures have never gone over well -- not Tirion Fordring, not Malfurion Stormrage, and certainly not Thrall. Blizzard tried to create a Varian Wrynn palatable to both Horde and Alliance players. The Alliance doesn't need that. The Alliance needs someone that makes us feel good about being who we are. The Alliance needs a representation of itself out on the front lines. Lo'gosh isn't that. Lo'gosh can't be that. Varian Wrynn, however, can be precisely that.
We need a new Lion of Stormwind. We haven't had one since Warcraft II, when Anduin Lothar bit the dust. Warcraft III showed us a catastrophic decline of humanity, and the human race has never recovered from it. We have no paladin order (Tirion Fordring went and disbanded it) or any meaningful order of warriors at all. All of our heroes exist only in the form of stone monuments scattered throughout the world. Our few heroes who are still alive have been cast out into other planets entirely. Danath Trollbane stands in his keep in Hellfire Peninsula filing paperwork. Turalyon is Light-knows-where.
Bolvar Fordragon is the closest we ever came to having a Lion of Stormwind again, and that was produced almost completely by players -- Bolvar never really did much until Wrath of the Lich King realized how we envisioned him all along. Our desire for a human hero was so great that we made one on our own built entirely on his ability to clear dragons out of the throne room. Bolvar was taken from us, and he sits on the Frozen Throne now. The hero we made is gone. Varian is no replacement. The Ghost Wolf is not the Lion. Let the Horde keep their wolves; we don't want them.You will stand trial for your crimes. You will stand in Capital City, in chains as the leaders of the Alliance decide your fate, and there you will acknowledge your full defeat. -- High General Turalyon
Does Varian Wrynn specifically need to be the Lion? No, he doesn't, but he needs to interact with and respect whoever it is, and there must be one.
You know who would make a damn cool lion? Joanna Blueheart. That's a character who understands Alliance warfare. Pull her out of Swamp of Sorrows, slap some commendations on her, give her armor befitting her station, and put her on the Alliance's front line in Mists of Pandaria. Joanna reports to Varian. Varian respects her worth. Everyone is happy. She doesn't need to be a central lore figure. She doesn't need to participate in politics like the faction leaders do. But she needs to be someone that we see and interact with long-term and feel good about.
A better man
Varian Wrynn could be a great character. His core problem is that he's a deeply flawed character, and in no form of media whatsoever have we been given a reason to look past his flaws. He is nothing but flaws. He's at his best when his mouth is shut and he's stabbing a dragon. That's not enough for the High King of the Alliance. Move him beyond some of his flaws. He talks the talk, but he doesn't walk the walk. Prop him up. Make him a better man.
I want to be proud of my king.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Lore
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 11)
Lokanaya Dec 8th 2011 5:33PM
I think one way to save Varian would be to have Velen and the Draenei get off their butts and DO something. Specifically, when Varian goes to the Exodar and does his thing, Velen teaches him from his own expierence that hate can only destroy, and the only thing to do is to keep hope alive and keep trusting in the Light. Maybe it doesn't stick at first, but Varian later sees a group of orcs somewhere, possibly Darkshore, and charges before thinking. The orcs are actually trying to stop Twilight Cultists/Burning Legion/Old God stuff and because they fail, the (enemy here) succeeds in summoning/coming through a portal. You beat them back, but Anduin gets severely injured, almost killed, and they head to the closest town to get him healed. Velen's there, because hey, Prophet, and he's able to heal Anduin because it's too much for anyone else. Varian finally "wakes up," and humbly tells Velen he was wrong, and can he please learn more. Maybe we can even get him into a Paladin this way.
It's not perfect, but the underlying point is there. I mean, we have a race that's been hounded by their former friends for thousands of years and are still the closest we get to pure good. Use them, for goodness sakes! They'd be perfect for this!
lilywillylover Dec 8th 2011 5:34PM
Fudge, you do know that Varian handed Garrosh's ass to him in Wolfheart, right?
thedoctor2031 Dec 8th 2011 9:26PM
I think I could easily see some more faction leader deaths. If you think about it, Cairne was murdered by Garrosh (albeit on accident), Magni was turned to stone and he didn't even do anything, Thrall becamse Jesus (that is what happened to him, right?) Sylvanas is going crazy and heading in the direction of Lich-Queen, Vol'jin was thrown out of Ogrimmar, Varian has had all sorts of weird things happen to him with his story line, Tyrande is married to one of the most prominent neutral figures yet her people are getting massacred in Ashenvale. With the Council of Three Hammers we have one gigantic mess, our High Gnomish Engineer hasn't exactly done anything at all besides take back Gnomergan (kind of). I really think a little more trauma couldn't hurt things TOO badly...
loli.gigis Dec 8th 2011 1:17PM
Here is my take, I think they will not change much about Varian... I believe they are playing him up to destroying himself and Anduin will be the leader the alliance wants/needs. But i do agree he needs to be seen more, even if just more quests started/ended with him would be an improvement. Seriously almost every zone you see Garrosh or end a quest with him but I never saw Varian when I leveled my ally.
To be fair though, in the short story the start he was still dealing with anger but towards the end he seemed more relaxed and ready to try and fix things with his son.
muffin_of_chaos Dec 8th 2011 1:55PM
The irony is that the majority of Horde players *hate* Garrosh as leader, even if he's more present in the world than Varian. Thrall was awesome, he protected the Horde against the Alliance's aggression, and then he was dumb enough to leave Garrosh in charge.
Otherwise, Horde players would be pretty happy being left to their own devices, out of the limelight. Y'know, except the ones playing blood elves, or any race with competitive racials.
The main reason to play the Horde is to feel independent, one who can do good as needed--save the world--but can also be survivalist (protect Kalimdor), traditionalist (maintain Troll customs, weird or ugly as they are), or just angry/twisted (goblins). It's too late to try to convince the playerbase that the Horde as it exists is actually evil, not just their leaders or the secretive Forsaken. But they seem to want to force the issue over time, which I'm pretty sure maybe 10% want.
Maybe they want the Horde to be a direct parallel to the Sith?
Anyway, just remember that the Horde doesn't think of Thrall as part of the Horde anymore. Even if he was super-important this expansion, he's abandoned his people, and that doesn't feel awesome. At the moment, discounting Thrall and Sylvanus (who's doing her own thing), the Horde has the short end of the stick leader-wise.
loli.gigis Dec 8th 2011 2:03PM
I never said anything about whether or not Garrosh was 'liked', only that questing he had bigger presence in the world then Varian did....
But if you want to go down that tangent despite the fact that this is about Varian and not about Garrosh - I don't like him. I have a feeling if Thrall doesn't do something then it will be the combined efforts of Baine, Vol'jin and Sylvannas that will take him out of power.
I find it funny that you took the time to write an entire response about playing a Horde character when the OP and my comment were about Varian and the only bit about the Horde in my comment was the comparison of how involved the characters are in questing.
loop_not_defined Dec 8th 2011 3:19PM
I've been getting the impression this whole "Lo'Gosh" thing was just to bring the Gilneans back into the Alliance.
That's what I don't get about all this "High King Orc" hate...the dude is named after a *Tauren* spirit (yes, the name Lo'Gosh is Taur-ahe and has been stated as such) and the whole point was to warm him up to the Alliance's new comrades: an entire race of "Wolf people" who get their strength directly from Lo'Gosh/Goldrinn.
The dude isn't an orc. He's a "wolf". His alternate name came from Tauren.
fudge Dec 8th 2011 1:17PM
"You will stand trial for your crimes. You will stand in Capital City, in chains as the leaders of the Alliance decide your fate, and there you will acknowledge your full defeat. -- High General Turalyon"
I love that quote so much, I want to marry it.
This is EXACTLY what we need against the Horde.
clundgren Dec 8th 2011 1:55PM
It's a great quote, but let's face it, there are not going to be any defeats of that scale anymore, since neither side can ever win. Right now, the Alliance has suffered some setbacks, and if the developer's comments are anything to go by, the Horde will be suffering some setbacks in MoP. But neither side will ever again achieve the sort of triumph that Turalyon won.
They do need to bring that guy back, though.
fudge Dec 8th 2011 1:59PM
I'm not saying we should have such a victory, I just want that kind of language back in the game.
Aggressive, yet principled. Steadfast, yet civilized.
Amaxe Dec 8th 2011 2:22PM
"It's a great quote, but let's face it, there are not going to be any defeats of that scale anymore, since neither side can ever win."
That's only because Blizz seems to be unwilling to change the 2 hostile factions in permanent conflict model.
If that was on the table, imagine the story lines that could be made.
clundgren Dec 8th 2011 2:41PM
But Amaxe, how can one side ever actually win?
Look at the QQ now, because one side is on the defensive. And it's not like the Alliance is even particularly losing, right now. Hillsbrad is an outright loss, but on the other hand they have Mulgore itself under seige, etc.
Now imagine if one faction or the other was actually told "Well, you lost. This next expansion is about you trying to recover and rebuild while your enemies lord it over you."
Amaxe Dec 8th 2011 4:17PM
I would much rather play a hunted faction seeking to recover and rebuild than the crap status quo we have now.
biggjudicem Dec 8th 2011 9:59PM
"Light, we expected to die—but we didn't... We did what we came here to do. What do we do now—that's up to us. There are others still out there—we need to find them, bring them back. We'll explore. Make new allies. Keep fighting the Horde, whatever's left here, so they don't ever try to do something like this again. The Light is still with us. We still have a job to do. This world will be what we choose to make of it."
WTB High General Turalyon
Bloodwynde Dec 8th 2011 1:18PM
I have to disagree with some of this. Yes Varian is deeply flawed, but I am proud to call him my king. He went through hell and emerged from the other side to lead his people. His rage does blind him, but he tries so very hard. And to him, every time he reaches his hand out, even tentatively, he gets burned anew.
I don't expect him to be a hero, I know his story too well to expect that, but he is still a man doing his best for his people, and you can see him building his son to be the man he can't. The new lion of stormwind who's roar will carry not rage, but hope. I'm proud of my king because he knows he's flawed, broken in some ways, and wants better for his son.
tabardsrock Dec 8th 2011 5:13PM
Srsly? I'd take Abasik Campfire as King over Varian any day!
Qualitybobby Dec 8th 2011 1:19PM
Bravo! This is EXACTLY what most of the Alliance player base is looking for. Real storylines, real character development, and something to feel pride about.
::forwards article to Blizzard::
StClair Dec 8th 2011 1:19PM
So Alliance leaders are either boring or insane. (Or got turned to diamond, which is kind of cool but still boring for the moment at least.) Good to know.
Philster043 Dec 8th 2011 1:23PM
Magni's unfortunate situation kind of embodies where Alliance leadership is currently at, doesn't it?
I'm typically a Horde player, but I do play Alliance from time to time. I will say I thought it was cool when Varian had called each leader to Stormwind to discuss the earthquakes right before the Cataclysm. That was kind of fun to see, if just to see them actually DOING something. Of course, it was just talking, but still.
Davemetalhead Dec 8th 2011 1:20PM
And for pities sake let all this happen in game! Not in stories, in books, in comics.