Night elf druids at the end of Cataclysm

In November 2010, before Cataclysm hit, I wrote a series of articles on why (or why not) to play a particular druidic race for theorycrafting, lore, and roleplay purposes. They turned out to be a really big hit with readers, and you can find them here:
- Shifting Perspectives: Why (or why not) to play a night elf druid
- Shifting Perspectives: Why (or why not) to play a tauren druid
- Shifting Perspectives: Why (or why not) to play a worgen druid
- Shifting Perspectives: Why (or why not) to play a troll druid
Within the game, this is who you are as a night elf druid. This is what the world thinks of you, and this is what you think of the world -- or at least, it's one perspective on it.

The defeat of Ragnaros and the successful growth and maintenance of the tree in the Firelands (sudden thought -- does it have a name other than the Sentinel Tree?) is a triumph for the elves, but you've got to wonder how they're handling the fallout from Deathwing's demise. The dragon aspects have inarguably been closest to the night elves out of all the Azerothian races, and they were intimately tied to the growing of Nordrassil, previous elven battles against the Qiraji and demon invasions, and now ... Well, it's pretty heavily implied that they, like the elves, are making their way through the world as mortals. It's got to be a pretty heavy psychological blow to realize that your champions have (probably) been deprived of their greatest powers, and it also means that the night elves almost certainly aren't getting their immortality back.
Having said that, Fandral Staghelm's absence from Teldrassil these days has removed the most persistent source of political infighting, and Malfurion's return has ensured that a power vacuum hasn't developed among the remaining elven druids. If your druid was more inclined toward Staghelm's point of view on the world, you could well be smarting over Tyrande and Malfurion's consolidated control over Darnassus, and so you might be spending a lot of time outside of elven territory as a result.
What does this mean for night elf druids? The night elves have a growing population of battle-hardened and well-traveled druids who've played key roles in Outland, Northrend, Kalimdor, and the Firelands, and that's a pretty interesting turn of events for such a xenophobic and isolationist race. It can be argued that, out of all their population, the druids are by far the most experienced with outside interaction and interest in the world's affairs. They're the core membership of the Cenarion Expedition, D.E.H.T.A., and the Guardians of Hyjal, and they're the people to turn to when the night elves want intelligence on what the other races are up to. That's a very different state of affairs from how we found elven druids in the original Warcraft series, and it might be that the younger druids are coping with this better than their millennia-old brethren.
The elves probably lost a lot of druids to Ragnaros, both in battle and to the Druids of the Flame, and I've always wondered if that points to some growing discontent among the faction, if not outright nihilism. Rather than safeguard a world guaranteed to be theirs for eternity, there are druids who want it destroyed outright. The Legacy of Leyara quest line is a nice hint at some of the undercurrents influencing events and a useful reminder that all politics are personal.
Between territorial losses to the orcs, the certain loss of their immortality, the loss of powerful support from the dragon aspects, and the growing power of the mortal races, it wouldn't be shocking if night elf druids were inwardly questioning what their place is in an increasingly uncertain world. Everything they were ever taught is being upended, and theirs is a culture far more used to micro change than macro. Your druid might be one of the joiners playing a major role in factions that seek to influence events (e.g., Guardians of Hyjal), or you might be someone who's increasingly withdrawn from a world you don't understand.
What do night elf druids think of the pandaren? Their emphasis on balance is likely to appeal to night elves, who have always seen nature as a balancing act -- predators keeping populations in check, forest fires weeding out the weak trees, and floods that nonetheless nurture the land as they recede. You will probably get along with the pandaren very well (that is, until their monks win one of your gear drops).
What is Azeroth's perspective on night elf druids now? "They're arrogant people, you know? Scary if they've been out in the field for a while without much civilizing influence, and they don't seem to care very much about us as long as the forests are healthy. But they're effective, I'll give them that. No one better for adapting to difficult terrain."
Best at tanking The night elves continue to be the best overall druidic race for tanking; it's tough to beat the passive 2% miss granted by Quickness. Shadowmeld is also a huge advantage in Arena, particularly for healers. Then again, resto hasn't fared anywhere near as well this expansion as it historically has.
Neutral points None of the night elves' racial bonuses have an impact on DPS or healing, although Elusiveness is nice for cats.
Shifting Perspectives helps you gear your bear druid, breaks down the facts about haste for trees, and then digs into the restoration mastery. You might also enjoy our look at the disappearance of the bear.
Filed under: Druid, Analysis / Opinion, (Druid) Shifting Perspectives
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 2)
Jorges Feb 1st 2012 11:41AM
Maybe it has something to do with the long lifespan of night elves? Even if they're not immortal anymore, they still live for centuries. All these Orcs that ravaged the lands will be dead "in a few years" on Night Elf eyes, and the forests will heal. Maybe Malfurion thinks that there are more important matters at hand?
After all these years sleeping, maybe he just want some quality time with Tyrande.
Juzelle Jan 31st 2012 5:46PM
I think 'dem elves pretty, mon.
...pretty tasty
monotype Jan 31st 2012 6:09PM
My biggest problem with immortality as it's presented in the game is that it's so...nebulously defined. What exactly have the Aspects lost? Even before they lost their immortality, it's clear that sufficient physical trauma could kill them -- I mean, we did down Malygos, after all. They're still enormously powerful. They're still capable of shaping Azeroth's destiny. Same thing with nelves. What did losing the Well really cost them? They might die of old age...25,000 years from now? They're still functionally immortal, and that makes it awkward, imo, to talk about the consequences of their sacrifices.
Akawaka Jan 31st 2012 6:56PM
Although it is not terribly well defined we can garner some things both in game and especially in the official books and stories. In the stories Tyrande and Malfurion along with others are already experiencing physical signs of age like subtle wrinkles and bodies aching that never did before. So based on this I would say the average life span of Night elf being "25 or 10 thousand years old is not truw lore wise. It is from the rpg books and blizz sis picking and choosing what they want. Those numbers were based of dungeons and dragons lore I believe sort of as filler.
Persoanlly I never like the idea of races having a "natural" life span that long outside of a Dragon and even then....
But ya Wolfheart and Stormrage both bring up night elf aging and it is happening quite quickly, I would say their natural lives would be similar to dwarves now at best.
Aranyszin Feb 1st 2012 10:51AM
The developers at Blizzard have done a fair to decent job keeping the aging issue out of the consistency problem. Let's face it - Anduin Wrynn was, what, 8? for 5 years? Then he was a teenager - BAM! - overnight? (Man that puberty is rough in RPGs...).
Drawing from the genre, the "immortality" of the more ethereal races (generally the gracile elves ) was always nebulous. Were the elves of LOTR (the book series) actually immortal? if so, why did they bear offspring? Or by "immortal" did they just live a scads-all long time?
If I had to put a number on it, I would say that the "humans" and "orcs" of WoW are intended to live about 100-125 years; dwarves, trolls, gnomes, goblins, 150-250 and elves on the order of 300 - 1000 (barring, of course, an unfortunate run in with a maddened dragon aspect, Old God, or unexpected cliff). Draenei are another question mark - it is evident that certain members (Valen, Archimonde, etc.) have lived an exceedingly long time. Are they immortal? Or simply the Methuslah's of their culture?
Orrine Feb 1st 2012 6:11AM
Allison, I want to ask an advice.
I haven't healed since Wrath. Well, I tried to heal dungeons in Cata, but my learning process was too slow, I was kicked too much, so I dropped healing. I decided to give healing a try when 4.3 came out. And while dungeons are pretty easy (well, at least nobody dies), I have a trouble to understand AoE healing in Raid Finder.
Rejuvenation seems to be useless in most situations: when raid damage is not very high or when only 5-6 toons are damaged, my heals (Wild Growth and Efflorescence) and other healers AoEs are enough. Also Rejuv seems to be too expensive in high AoE damage situations: when I use it at the end of each phase of Madness, I run out of mana pretty quickly.
Probably Rejuv is better in normal raids, since damage there is higher and constant healing is needed. But for now I feel to insecure to try to apply for normal mode raids since I can't figure out what to do in situations when raid takes damage. Now I use Efflorescence, Wild Growth, renew Lifebloom on tank, throw a couple of Healing Touches to most injured and start the cycle again. But I'm always 3rd or 4th on healing meters, and other Restoration druid's performance doesn't differ from mine.
Allison Robert Feb 1st 2012 11:58AM
Hmmm. A few questions:
1. What's your gear like?
2. Could this actually be the result of other healers slacking rather than you? (Certainly possible through LFR.)
3. Do you have Wild Growth glyphed?
4. What's your mana like during the average heroic 5-man right now?
5. Where do you typically end a fight at mana-wise?
Orrine Feb 1st 2012 2:35PM
1. I have ilvl 376 gear, no set bonuses.
2. Well, I don't know. But I constantly see that shaman outheal me. I think it's because they have smart heal with instant effect (Chain Heal). Ususally there's 2 - 3 healers who's worse than me, but I'm never at the first at healmeters.
3. Yes, It's glyphed. I also use Tree form frequently.
4. I don't have mana problems in 5 mans, I rarely finish boss fights with about 20% of mana, usually I have more.
5. It depends on boss. I usually go oom on Madness, Yor'sahj and Ultaxion, the fights where I need to use AoE heals very frequently.
What I wanted to know specifically is how do you heal when boss damages more then half of the raid during lonish peiods of time? What spells do you use when WG and Efflorescence on CD?
josh Feb 1st 2012 7:15AM
This was a really unexpected article from Allison. It really proves that she's the best WI writer and that we're lucky she plays a druid. Thank you very much and please keep at it!
Jorges Feb 1st 2012 11:36AM
Loved the article! Nice insight on the current lore. As a Night Elf Druid (and feral one), I salute you.