Know Your Lore, TFH Edition: The naaru are a menace that must be destroyed

A soothing light fills you as you approach the naaru. Slow musical chimes echo within your mind and though a word is not uttered, you feel an assurance of safety.
They glimmer with the purity of the Light, and their very presence fills one with a warm, calm feeling of inner peace. They also teach the ways of the Light -- the draenei would not be paladins were it not for these mysterious creature's intervention. In fact, the benevolent naaru came to Velen in a vision when his world was at its darkest hour, offering him hope, salvation, escape ... and the knowledge that there was a far larger battle out there, one that had yet to come to pass.
Kil'jaeden and Archimonde eagerly agreed to follow and serve Sargeras, becoming the highest-ranked members of the Burning Legion. As for Velen, he took the worried, the lost, the concerned draenei with him and fled, pledging his servitude to the naaru and their righteous cause. Two causes, one outwardly and easily identifiable as evil -- and the other, far more sinister and wicked than anything the Burning Legion could ever hope to achieve.
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 what is to come. These speculations are merely theories and should not be taken as fact or official lore.

The naaru are quite simply the most devious creatures in the known universe. The Burning Legion? The Old Gods? The naaru put both of these monstrosities to shame. Their plan is elegant, simple, and almost too sinister to comprehend. For the naaru wander the known universe, spreading a message of peace, benevolence, and above all, calm. The naaru are capable of getting even the most bitter of enemies to work together -- look at the ranks of the Shattered Sun for a clear example. The naaru have at least one race wholly devoted to their existence, and that race is quietly spreading the message of the naaru, completely unaware of what that blanket of calm and peace really means.
If one seeks to rule the universe, what is the easiest way to control it? Not with an iron fist -- not at first, at any rate. No, first you must win over the universe and quietly convince it that you are the best option of any to take it over. So you set yourself up as the enemy of the most obvious enemy out there -- the Burning Legion and Sargeras -- and present yourself in the best light possible (no pun intended). Once you've established your position as the benevolent and kind savior, your work afterwards is easy. After all, no one would suspect that a creature brimming with Light and grace could possibly be evil.
And so you begin your real mission -- to pacify the universe into a sense of eternal calm and peace, happiness and joy. The naaru are like carnivorous plants; what they promise is a world full of sweet idealism, a world where evil is no longer present. Their siren song of utopia tickles the ears of those who listen until they are at last seduced into servitude, a member in training of the army of the Light.
And when that siren song comes to its end, the trap snaps shut. After all, it's far easier to rule a universe if nobody particularly objects to your being there. Once the world is bending to your every whim, convinced that you can do no wrong, you are free to do whatever you wish.

But hey -- simply being present and exuding a peaceful aura isn't enough to win everyone over. So why not let your servants do the work for you, in the form of the Light's teachings? Let's take a quick look at the Light and how it works.
- It is a nontheistic religious philosophy, not a school of magic. In other words, it's based on belief, not ley lines or fel energy.
- It is practiced by spreading emotion to "connect oneself to the universe." A follower of the Light seeks to develop goodness, within and without. In order to be a true devotee of the Light, one must spread those feelings of goodness and goodwill throughout the universe.
- The tenets of the Light are respect, tenacity, and compassion. Respect for those around you, the tenacity to adhere to this philosophy, and the compassion to recognize situations where help is absolutely needed.
The draenei have so wholly devoted themselves to the Light and the naaru that the naaru are present pretty much everywhere in draenei society. Even in the depths of the Exodar, a naaru chimes pleasantly. Exodar guards aren't really guards; they're titled peacekeepers. Keepers of the peace, the calm, the order. And if you aren't keeping with the peace, the keepers will certainly get rid of you.
The Sunwell "restored"
Now why, you may ask, would the draenei willingly consort with a known enemy of the Alliance, much less give them back the most powerful tool in their society? The draenei restored the Sunwell and gave the blood elves back their powers, right? Well ... sort of. The draenei "ignited" the Sunwell, using the heart of a fallen naaru.
Salvation -- in the form of a naaru "sacrifice" and a Sunwell that no longer radiates simple arcane energy. No, the Sunwell as it stands now radiates with Light energy as well as the arcane. After all, you can't get rid of the arcane, and it's what the blood elves crave anyway, isn't it? So why not taint the water supply with a burst of sheer peace and calm? It's like laying down ant traps. The poison doesn't just poison the ant; it poisons every ant the poison is carried back to. Soon, the ant colony is dead -- or in this case, utterly pacified and feeling quite dandy about the Light and the naaru.Prophet Velen says: Gaze now, mortals - upon the HEART OF M'URU! Unblemished. Bathed by the light of Creation - just as it was at the Dawn.
The heart of M'uru disintegrates and flows into the Sunwell. The Sunwell reignites in a fount of blinding light.
Prophet Velen says: In time, the light and hope held within - will rebirth more than this mere fount of power... Mayhap, they will rebirth the soul of a nation.
Lady Liadrin says: Blessed ancestors! I feel it... so much love... so much grace... there are... no words... impossible to describe...
Prophet Velen says: Salvation, young one. It waits for us all.

Last week, we took a look at Velen's prophecy regarding the big war between Light and Darkness, and it was a look at how it could tie into Mists as well. The naaru are fighting darkness, and it may seem as though this is a righteous and noble cause; after all, they are seeking to eliminate anything that can destroy us. But are they really seeking to make the world a better place for all involved, or are they simply trying to eliminate any competition in their bid for universal supremacy?
Here's the thing -- the naaru cannot eliminate the darkness entirely because it is an irrevocable part of who they are. All naaru have the potential to delve into a void state, and they will either wholly surrender to the void, or they will regenerate back to their former selves.
Do you know how they regenerate? They devour the spirits of the dead. It happened in Auchindoun; it happened in Nagrand. And though the naaru seem slightly regretful of these occurrences, they can't really help it. D'ore says it outright: "For several centuries, the spirits of Auchindoun coalesced into my darkened essence. Many of the catastrophes that befell this crypt were a direct result of my weakened state. Regrettably, there is nothing that can be done to stop this cycle. It is a facet of the naaru condition -- without the void, the Light cannot exist."
In other words, "We're terribly sorry about devouring the spirits of your beloved dead. But we need to do that in order to come back to the Light. And you like the Light, don't you? It's warm, compassionate, peaceful and serene. So you can forgive our transgressions, can't you?"
We aren't a righteous army of the Light. We are dinner. We are cannon fodder. We are being sent in to do the work of the naaru and eliminate all competition for universal domination -- and in the event that we fail, in the event that the naaru are damaged, our souls will make for tasty nom-noms so that the naaru can start the cycle all over again.

I'm sure by this point you're wondering what this has to do with Azeroth, since the draenei are obviously newcomers to the world. Natives of Azeroth have been practicing the ways of the Light for plenty of years before the draenei showed up and brought the naaru with them. Or perhaps the naaru have been here all along ... just a little more quiet and more subtle than the naaru who approached Velen.
In Ashenvale, there's a wonderful quest chain for Alliance in which players are sent to find a cure for a sick little night elf. Over the course of the quest, players are eventually sent to find Elune's Tear, a stone with magical properties. The stone has been marred due to the volcanic chaos in the area, and players are asked to cleanse the stone at a moonwell. And after dousing the stone in the moonwell, there's a sudden flash of brilliant light and a voice that speaks to you about continuing on.
A voice from inside the moonwell flows over your mind, bringing you a perfect sense of peace.
It is Elune speaking to you and telling you where to progress next in the chain -- but the odd part is that Elune's voice has the same properties as those of the naaru. Now I've written about the possibility of Elune and An'she being naaru before, in another crazy tinfoil hat article. But this quest almost deliberately points to a connection between the two.
If Elune and An'she were indeed naaru, why didn't they show themselves from the beginning, like the naaru did with Velen so long ago on Argus? I'm guessing a lot of it was because at the time the night elves came into being, our planet was still very, very primitive -- primitive enough that a giant glowing windchime appearing out of nowhere would be seen as a sign of aggression and something to be attacked, rather than the "miracle" that Velen witnessed.
And isn't it interesting that the tauren didn't really think twice about An'she for thousands upon thousands of years, completely ignoring his teachings? Yet once the naaru had established themselves on the planet, brought by an "accidental" crash landing, the tauren started to realize there was something out there that they hadn't considered yet. Sure, it took a few years -- but then, the path of universal domination isn't a speedy one. The naaru are essentially immortal, and have forever to live. They have the endless patience it takes to wait.

What's even creepier than this is that it has been implied that the night elves were brought into being by Elune somehow. These former dark trolls ascended to a society that was much more developed and advanced than imaginable, and they made that progression in a ludicrously fast time frame. That suggests intervention, and that suggests the tales of Elune's creating the night elves are absolutely correct.
It also suggest that the existence of elves on Azeroth is an unnatural occurence, one spawned by the direct intervention of a naaru. And the night elves did their job quite handily, jumping from a few dark trolls converted into this new form into a full-fledged society that dominated Kalimdor in the span of a few short centuries, completely taking over as the top race of the world -- until, that is, they started messing with the Well of Eternity and shattered the world into multiple continents.
So here's a theory for you. Once upon a time, E'lune and An'she came to Azeroth, with the intent on taking it over for their own purposes. The creatures of the world were far too primitive and brutal to simply recruit, and so E'lune struck on a plan with An'she's help. They created the night elves from some of the most brutal of these creatures and helped them ascend to a new race -- a race devoted to E'lune's teachings. But not all of the creatures of Azeroth were so primitive.
The tauren were also interested in E'lune and An'she, referring to them as the left and right eyes of the Earthmother, the goddess of the tauren, represented by the world itself. But something dire happened. Some of the night elves were seduced by the powers of the Well of Eternity, and E'lune's plan backfired in spectacular fashion. E'lune and An'she were separated with the explosion, and the tauren soon forgot the teachings of An'she because he was no longer as present as he had once been.

Obviously simply contacting these fallen night elves wouldn't solve anything; they had already made their choice and fallen away from E'lune. But An'she could direct these humans and plant the seeds there -- and perhaps when the humans and the former kal'dorei came into contact, they would be reminded of their roots and return to their teachings as was only proper.
But this plan, too, failed. The quel'dorei were far too interested in the Sunwell and its teachings than the naaru had ever imagined. And so when the Burning Legion returned to Azeroth, when the Lich King reared his head, An'she simply waited. And when the Scourge ran rampant across the Eastern Kingdoms, An'she encouraged those that followed the Light to fight. Though the loss of Arthas was regretful, his purpose was clear -- he would eventually make his way to the Sunwell and destroy it.

So they called in the cavalry.
And the Exodar just happened to crash land on Azeroth, in night elf territory, complete with naaru on board and inhabitants that were so embued with the Light that though the night elves were frightened at first, they soon lent a helping hand to their sudden neighbors. The draenei quietly worked on repairing the damage they had done to the planet, while elsewhere, the naaru continued their assistance.
In A'dal's prophecy regarding the sin'dorei, he states that M'uru knew exactly what he was getting into and that his fall to Kael'thas was deliberate. One assumes this is because M'uru knew he would eventually become the salvation of the blood elves, but if you look at it a different way, it suddenly becomes far more sinister. M'uru deliberately gave himself over to the void, deliberately died, and his heart was taken by Velen, a champion of the naaru's cause, and used to ignite the Sunwell once more -- this time, infused with the heart of a naaru.
And somewhere on Azeroth, E'lune was pleased, because her children had at last returned to the path from which they'd deviated.

Now the naaru have established a firm hold over much of Azeroth's population. Even gnomes are beginning to embrace the ways of the Light, if from a purely scientific perspective. The quel'dorei are happy with the return of the Sunwell, and they don't question the reasons for its return. Nor do they question Velen. Nor do they question the naaru. After all, these creatures were responsible for saving their civilization. They were responsible for saving the draenei civilization. They were responsible for the creation of the elves, though they may not realize it now.
And now that Azeroth is under the naaru's firm grasp, something simply must be done about all that pesky bickering between Alliance and Horde. After all, fighting simply won't do. Peace must be kept at all costs. Because in the end, we are all meant to be pacified.
It's so much easier to take over the universe that way.
For more information on the people, places and history mentioned here, check out other Know Your Lore columns, such as:
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






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 5)
raposo02790 Mar 4th 2012 4:15PM
I always wondered if the naaru were the vorlons (B5) of the wow universe humans eventually telling the order and chaos aligned aliens where to go.
staffan.johansson Mar 4th 2012 4:21PM
I guess I'm not the only one who saw the similarity in the article :)
votlemnouk Mar 4th 2012 5:51PM
It's even better. Remember the concept art of Sha(dows) made for Mists of Pandaria?
http://pureawesome.net/wow/111026_sha.jpg
http://bcr-imagebucket.wikispaces.com/file/view/SHADOW1.jpg/152690879/SHADOW1.jpg
"If you go to Pandaren... you will die." ;-)
raposo02790 Mar 4th 2012 6:56PM
thats an awesome comparison between the shadows and the sha never really saw the concept art before. Maybe we will get a middle man like lorien (hmm velen) to guide us...
maybe not... as much as I love B5 I don't want a carbon copy if thats the case I'll pop in the dvds, but I love the nod. =) good juju to all my wow brethren.
Buran Mar 4th 2012 11:57PM
Considering that the spiritual leader of the Minbari people was Valen (note the spelling), who could see the future at certain points (not saying how, so those who haven't seen the series won't have it spoilt) -- yes, I'd say there's a parallel between the Vorlons (creatures of energy) and the naaru. :)
Rioriel Mar 4th 2012 4:18PM
WTB [Brand-New Socks], durability reduced to 0% in freak blown-off accident caused by rogue.
Woah.
staffan.johansson Mar 4th 2012 4:19PM
So... Naaru are Vorlons?
Dukah Mar 4th 2012 4:28PM
That was brilliant and well said.
Pyromelter Mar 4th 2012 4:30PM
I'm not buying it. Plenty of evil souls for naaru to ingest... you're gonna tell me the same race that had it's leader go out of the way for a foot soldier in northrend, saying "The light does not abandon its champions" is some sort of evil diabolical race? All living beings must ingest sustenance of some sort. The naaru aren't hell-bent on conquering the universe.
Also, I thought blizzard stated somewhere that Elune was not a naaru, in a blue lore post or a blizzcon panel some time. Or maybe it was because Elune mated with Malorne, which created Cenarius... and since we've never noted any other naaru to mate like this, that was the thought as to why Elune couldn't be a naaru? It was something like that - in any case that whole series of facts blows a big hole in todays TFH musings.
Anne Stickney Mar 4th 2012 5:10PM
The question/answer you're thinking of is the following:
Q: Is Elune a naaru?
A: During a recent visit to Darnassus by Velen, he explained that the kaldorei's description of Elune, as well as the demonstrated powers of the goddess, matched his experiences with powerful naaru. He began to offer advice regarding how to commune with powerful naaru, but Tyrande thanked him for his opinion, then cordially requested that he refrain from making such outlandish claims when in Darnassus or in the presence of Elune's priesthood.
Basically, they didn't say Elune isn't a naaru. They said the night elves aren't interested in finding out if Elune is a naaru. Biiiiig difference there.
Boobah Mar 4th 2012 5:26PM
I still think our KYL writers are way, way too fond of the whole E'lune theory, and more than happy to tear up any bit of established continuity to keep playing with it.
For example, I'll stipulate the idea that diabolical!naaru can control (or at least heavily influence) folks who follow the Light. So in this scenario, An'she pushes Arthas to be extra zealous in his pursuit of first Kel'Thuzad and later Varimathras. Sure.
How does that lead to the destruction of the Sunwell? See, Arthas picked up Frostmourne and consequently gave up his soul to the Lich King; he arguably has less free will at this point than the PC DKs do before Light's Hope. At this point, An'she no longer has anything to control... he's Ner'zul's tool. Which means it wasn't An'she's doing that Arthas later desecrates the Sunwell to resurrect KT, nor is it obvious that that would be something the Lich King would do.
Heck, it's counterproductive, anyway, since as much as the queldorei followed any faith they followed the Light, and this genius 'plan' involves the destruction of two powerful kingdoms full of Light worshippers (Lordaeron and Quel'thalas) as well as dealing the local order of paladins a blow from which they arguably haven't yet recovered.
See, a plan like "M'uru allows himself to be captured to be a beacon of the Light within the sindorei capital" makes sense. It's simple, and despite the hiccups (I somehow don't think the whole "sacrifice M'uru to open a gateway for Kil'jaeden" was sketched into the original plan) it worked, first by allowing the creation of the Blood Knights, and later by transforming the Sunwell.
icepyro Mar 4th 2012 5:57PM
you're gonna tell me the same race that had it's leader go out of the way for a foot soldier in northrend, saying "The light does not abandon its champions" is some sort of evil diabolical race?
By the theory of this tfh, essentially, he faithfully served the Light and is destined to die. You flavor him with an Emerald Acorn, cook nicely with the breath of Alexstraza, and only then does Adal come to collect his soul, their food, after basting it in some Light to finish ridding itself of Scourge. If devouring souls keeps naaru in a state of Light, then the most faithful are likely to be the most succulent, regardless of rank.
Zeroum Mar 4th 2012 6:11PM
The Lich King is another soul predator introduced in Azeroth's environment, fighting for the same resources as the Naaru. The Naaru then send their forces to stop the Lich King from devouring their food.
The champions proceed to weaken the Lich King, then he prepares to devour their souls, exposing his weakness, the Naaru give powers to Fordring and the Light-forged Ashbringer, and he stops Frostmoune's hunger.
The Lich King, the real Lich King is actually the Frozen Throne, is almost the same as the Naaru, dimensional beings from/made of Twisting Nether material.
Pyromelter Mar 4th 2012 6:12PM
That wasn't it Anne, although I remember it.
The biggest issue I have with Elune being a naaru is the fact that she was able to mate and have children as well as being the progenitor of an entire species (the dryads) on Azeroth. As far as I can tell, the naaru are not in the business of procreation of mortal races or actually creating mortal races. Sure you have that eredar/dranaei picture up there, but they look a lot more similar than trolls and night elves.
The other major point againts elune being a naaru is that the naaru don't hide who they are or what they are. Sure there is that one naaru in oshu'gun, but that naaru was injured and stuck there, not out mating and then running away and hiding.
Heck, you wrote the KYL ON Elune, Malorne, and Cenarius - http://wow.joystiq.com/2011/07/17/know-your-lore-cenarius-malorne-and-ysera/
Let me punch some other holes in this KYL (and btw Shade, I love you, so none of this is personal, I've just come to disagree with the "Elune is a naaru" speculation, for reasons above and others I'm about to list):
all of the following is written with information taken off of the wowpedia:
-Elune tried to guide the night elves AWAY from the well of eternity, in direct contradiction to the naaru who re-ignited the sunwell for the blood elves
-Elune is female. Naaru are not known to have any gender
-Elune sings a song of peace at night, no known analog to other naaru
-Elune causes "a rain of solid moonlight to fall when her priestesses face enemies," no known naaru has done this
-Elune is directly associated with night and star and blue-white magic, again no known naaru analog to this. Elune is also a direct progenitor of the druids, utilizing nature magic and the aforementioned star/moon magic - while similar with the ability to heal, the origin of the magic emanates from different sources (Sure, you can argue it's the same source with a different name... but no other naaru makes claim to have a different source of magic other than "the light.")
-Elune directly made Aviana into a Demigoddess, no other naaru has bestowed that power on a mortal
-Elune directly intervened to save Tyrande with a shield as Azshara's palace was coming down, no known naaru has done this (although gameplay mechanics suggest that a naaru could cast a spell like PW:S or PW:Barrier, none have directly done this to save a specific mortal)
-Elune created the Moonkin - absolutely no known analogous act by any naaru
Regarding the naaru being evil, I will bring up this developer quote:
"...it is EXCEEDINGLY rare for a naaru to fall into a void state, and even rarer for a fallen naaru to be brought back into the Light. A naaru's fall into the void represents a catastrophic loss for the naaru and for the forces of the Light, and it is the saddest, most heart-wrenching event for the naaru to witness"
I am willing to admit there are some similarities between the naaru and elune, mainly the healing properties as well as spiritual bonds between the people who follow them. But the naaru act mostly like a Mr. Miyagi - trusted and wise advisers who occasionally heal the wounded, whereas Elune is a creator, an interventionist, a god who shapes and even creates entire races and species of mortals.
There are just far, far too many differences for me to buy into the "Elune is a naaru" hypothesis. Until there is some evidence that the naaru are capable of doing some of the things Elune has done, the story just doesn't add up to Elune being a naaru.
Sorry for the wall of text, just wanted to cover all the bases here.
icepyro Mar 4th 2012 7:18PM
Pyro, this is in an effort to further discussion, so disregard completely if this seems heated, but regarding your list...
-Elune tries to move the night elves away from the Well of Eternity (since they are essentially denying her worship by worshiping arcane), and towards her own source of power... er.. herself. Failing that, the world goes boom, and there is this Sunwell much like the previous Well, and elves are desperately trying to find a new source of magic to fill it. So why not fill it with the source of magic you wish them to be using since they seem quite bent on making it work.
- prior to wow, the druids and the priestesses of Elune were two different classes completely unrelated. Since the night elves were a matriarchal race and females had Elune, men had to find something else to fill the void the Well left. They chose druidism, but to be more socially acceptable, Elune created, er gave birth to a different being to teach them this magic. Elune may not have had enough strength for them to use the Light as well as her priestesses, so other forms were given. see below.
- in the War of the Ancients, Tyrande represented the leader of a religion that if she died, someone else possibly more like Azshara and less like Tyrande may have risen to power and if that happened, Elune would be severely lacking in followers than she already was. Also, we don't know if no naaru has ever done that. Somehow I am betting that if Velen was ever truly threatened, particularly back on Argus, that A'dal may very well have spared mortals for the sake of continuing this group of followers.
- The most primative of religions tend to have a god of Sun and Moon. Elune and Anshe may have chosen to present themselves as such. When Anshe became separated during the sundering, Elune was the only one left to worship and empower the night elves, thus keeping up the facade meant continuing the representation of the Moon.
Elune may very well have been in a void state. This would explain why she chose the Moon and Anshe took the sun as symbols. Cenarious being part nature itself understands nature anyways to teach druidism and she may have taught him arcane anyways since it was handy and she couldn't bestow her own power to him (which is why he couldn't be with her and was raised by Ysera). She may have gotten back to the Light eventually, but then the Sundering happened. This may also explain why she chose to create the Night Elves near the Well. She might still be in the Light but really weak since Night Elves became immortal after the Sundering and she was weak to begin with.
Anyways, as I said before, this is just my take towards explaining things in a different way to account for Elune still being naaru. Take what you will.
Xantenise Mar 4th 2012 8:10PM
Blizzard also said Mists of Pandaria wasn't an expansion pack. Then a few weeks later...
Jabadabadana Mar 4th 2012 10:09PM
A void state naruu seems to be nearly incapable of acting. It seems to be a largely dormant state that results in them passively leaking void energies, and absorbing souls and the like. A void Elune would not likely be able to do anything like pretend to be a goddess. Something stuck in an absorptive state, does not really grant power.
The most primitive religions thing applies to humans in our world. And even under the assumption that there's more to it, the draenei were not/are not, exactly heavily advanced, especially when the naruu first came to them, yet the naruu didn't pretend to be anything other than naruu.
" prior to wow, the druids and the priestesses of Elune were two different classes completely unrelated. Since the night elves were a matriarchal race and females had Elune, men had to find something else to fill the void the Well left. "
As I understand it, the reverse is true. The males agreed to be custodians of the Dream, and the females were left to find something. In addition, both male and female nelfs revere Elune anyway.
My own issues with the article are: Naruu don't appear to eat. We aren't food, or else even a light-cycle naruu would be eating souls. (else, eating is an accident entirely, since void state torpor seems to be unintentional) Honestly if they eat anything, it seems like it would be the positive energy of people being good and happy.
Also, the Naruu do not seem to really be attempting to establish dominance. I have yet to see a Naruu try to take charge, they merely seem to move in, and people build stuff around them while they glow, chime, and reconfigure themselves.
Anshe cannot be working with Elune as a world dominant evil naruu, because he is an option Away from Elune. He is the Tauren's second look druidism in comparison with the night elves.
A few thoughts anyway.
Snuzzle Mar 4th 2012 10:14PM
Re: Elune is female. Well, the night elves certainly inerpret her as female, but who can say for sure? I believe that accounts of seeing Elune state she is so bright you can hardly make out her true form. Also, let's not forget a lot of religions and faiths which attribute one gender or another to the Diety of Wind, or Water, or Travels, or etc. Surely none of those abstract concepts have a gender either? But it is human nature to identify a creature as first "male or female."
Re: Elune's song. Haven't you ever heard that pleasant, tinkling of chimes and bells when you approach a Naaru? ;)
Not saying I agree or disagree with that theory. Just saying your counterpoints aren't all so.. counter.
mibu.work1 Mar 4th 2012 11:25PM
My impression is that if the Naaru eat anything at all, it's good emotion, and seeing as they exude good emotion, nothing is lost around them. If good emotion is energy, with little electrons of contentment and quarks of generosity, then the Naaru are pretty much perpetual-motion machines. Remember, K'ure in Osh'gun was injured in the Naaru crash, and drew the orc ancestors there. We've seen the void-state naaru consume souls of the dead, but those paths can be inturrupted, either by demonic magic, necromancy, or something else. In the case of the orcs, shamans would offer the purest water of their homes to the ancestors, which fed into the pool K'ure rested in. This sustained him, and the ancestors were there, in balance, and left un-consumed. They didn't start being consumed, or turning to the void themselves, until after Gul'dan sealed off Osh'gun, and spoke the cipher of damnation, severing the orcs from their mountain, and the elementals, thus, they were severed from the pure water they'd used. Without nourishment, the peaceful ancestors were slowly consumed by K'ure, and this process was encouraged by the legion when they gained direct control of Osh'gun.
As far as I see it, the three void-state Naaru we've seen have fallen each time due to some catastrophic, or indeed cataclysmic, force, such as a crashing vessel, and have then entered a state of complete helplessness, until they're manipulated by another's control, whether the corrupted Anorchite's necromancy, the legion's fel-magic, or the blood-magic mixed with fel by the Sunstrider faction. The naaru may be manipulative, but they seem to be both relatively fragile and sorrowful of the sacrifices they must ask of the mortals who aid them. after all, we've seen only about a dozen naaru in the entire game, who's to say that's not their entire race, or perhaps what's left of it?
Omegan01 Mar 5th 2012 2:08AM
"Re: Elune is female. Well, the night elves certainly inerpret her as female, but who can say for sure?"
Malorne.
And Cenarius.