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.
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Reader Comments (Page 4 of 5)
Deathgore Mar 4th 2012 7:34PM
What happens when two ancient races of gods make a pact with one another? Two races that feed on the evil in people's souls. One that corrupts people from below the earth and another that portrays itself as an benevolent creature of power, lending itself to religion. The religious zealots then crusade against other evils, falling to corruption and becoming their own antithesis and feeding the hunger of both Gods.
Gods are only as powerful as their source of energy. If war is something that contributes to the power source, then why not push your followers to fight against one another?
Sounds like the Naaru and the Old Gods have one hell of a deal with each other.
Pyromelter Mar 5th 2012 4:56AM
Upvoted; I know I've been against the whole idea of "naaru are evil" but there are plenty of stories that are wonderful that make use of the plot idea that "good can't exist without evil" so that if you take away evil, all the good guys disappear.
I don't know where or how the naaru could have come into contact with the old gods to make such a pact, but I wouldn't put it past them to manipulate events so that they would be in eternal conflict with the burning legion.
llcjay2003 Mar 4th 2012 7:16PM
I like where you are going with this article, but at this point, I think you are far more creative than Blizzard. I really do not think they are spending enough time on compelling lore anymore. I would not give them this much credit to come up with a story this interesting.
Will you please go write for them?
Boobah Mar 5th 2012 12:51AM
Oh, god no. We don't need the inmates running the asylum just yet. That's how you get stuff like Spider-Man's "One More Day."
I don't have an issue with the creativity Anne displays; I have issues with her ability to justify how these creative twists make sense.
For example, if E'lune and An'she created their servitor race, as opposed to the kaldorei being a more-or-less natural result of the unnatural power of the Well, why is An'she completely absent from night elf myth?
mikey Mar 4th 2012 7:27PM
All ways thought that the Naaru and BL where the same, just had different approaches to it.
Noekh Mar 4th 2012 7:43PM
Anne, you are my favourite, because you write about things I think no one else has the bravery to. I salute you.
/salute!
Can you do a TFH article on how Aethas Sunreaver may be Eldin Sunstrider?
I have my own theory about that. He keeps his face hidden, and in (some story, I forget, but I remember it somewhere, dangit!) some mentioned manner, he wears Kael'thas' robes!
Omegan01 Mar 4th 2012 9:13PM
"Can you do a TFH article on how Aethas Sunreaver may be Eldin Sunstrider?"
He's not Kael'thas and he's not a relative thereof. Cut it out.
Good god, the guy is an awesome background character who's accomplished some really great things for his race and helped to pull them out of their isolation. He doesn't have to be soaped into some long-lost relative who was Hidden All Along, that would only cheapen him.
Let the guy stand as he is. Let the elves' plot move forward. Stop trying herp-derp Aethas into something he isn't.
evandunn80 Mar 4th 2012 7:50PM
So help the naaru and be used as food or be tortured killed by demons and old gods? At least the "bad guys" are telling me the truth!
Edymnion Mar 4th 2012 7:54PM
There is a slight flaw in the very basis of the article, that the desire for galactic domination is in itself an evil motive. Our own history has shown us that the best form of government is the beneficent dictator. Someone that has what is best for their people at heart, and the unquestioned power and authority to carry it out.
The entire reason civilization exists is because the group as a whole has more power to benefit the individual than the individual ever could on their own. As long as that holds true, there will need to be a way for the group to be directed and controlled, and somebody is going to have to be ultimately at the head of that controlling body.
Only when the individual is being actively harmed by the controlling body does it become "evil", in that it has perverted it's true purpose, usually in self interest of the controlling body. As long as the control is not at the expense of the people, and that the goals of the controllers are also what is best for the controlled, who is to say that it is evil?
Boobah Mar 5th 2012 1:08AM
Yeah, benevolent dictators are great. Right up until they stop being benevolent. Or existing. Whichever comes first.
And besides, there's not really any such thing. Every so-called absolute dictator still has people he has to answer to; no one person can control a nation all on their own. You piss off too many of the people helping you run things, they'll vote for somebody else. At which point your benevolent 'dictator' starts having other priorities than doing what is best for the country, because keeping your elites satisfied rarely involves doing what's best for everybody.
Edymnion Mar 5th 2012 9:48AM
Hey, I never said that it was practical in a realistic sense, just that it is the ideal. Long as you've got humans in the system, you can never trust a single person with that much power, it corrupts them far too quickly. But these aren't people, its the Naaru.
Blayze Mar 4th 2012 8:07PM
I was always convinced, back when TBC was the New Hotness, that the naaru would turn out to be evil.
clundgren Mar 4th 2012 10:27PM
Pretttttttty speculative.
Fletcher Mar 4th 2012 11:13PM
Anne Stickney is a heretic, a woeful husk seething with foul shadows. She has turned her back on the Infinitely Holy Light and has refused redemption. Although it pains us, the good of the universe must always be foremost in our thoughts; for the good of the universe, this heresy must end.
You will receive:
16 gold 36 silver
500 Aldor rep
Cody Mar 4th 2012 11:53PM
If anyone here has ever read The War of the Dwarves by Markus Heitz, the main enemy is an army known as the Avatars, beings dedicated to the eradication of all evil and darkness in the land. Unfortunately, they take their mission so literally that they assume any that stand in their way to be evil and will destroy any and all, even innocent bystanders, who are between them and their goal.
I honestly feel that the Naaru are somewhat similar to this. They are so dedicated to the destruction of evil that they will destroy the innocent to achieve their goal.
My 2 cents.
Omegan01 Mar 5th 2012 1:25AM
The Scryers. Actually, scratch that. The blood elves as a whole.
One of the naaru actually sacrified itself to save them from corruption rather than write them off.
Your theory is invalid.
davidpz Mar 5th 2012 12:21AM
I get it now. The Naaru are extra-large Midichlorians! And this is all about balancing the light side and the dark side of the Fo.....
Glenn Mar 5th 2012 12:20AM
Totally just blew my mind, to think that something i thought was the very essence of the word beautiful could be so twisted and warped within its own ethos of apparent purity.
davidpz Mar 5th 2012 1:03AM
On a more serious note --
While one may finds 'wheels within wheels' to support almost any conspiracy if one endeavors to look [cf. Foucalt's Pendulum for the result], there are at least one or two races on Azeroth who appear, in lore, to have come by their knowledge of the Light outside of the influence of the Naaru, Night Elves or Tauren.
The folks who are primarily concerned are, of course, the Paladins, who do not acknowledge any "moon god" you care to mention.
The fact of the matter is, the Light exists outside of the presence of the Naaru. The Naaru may be their greatest champions, but they are not its only champions. The Light "works" ... it is not All Powerful, nor is it wielded by a super race of beings on Azeroth. It is wielded by man and dwarf, complete with their own set of prejudices, fears, lies, tyrannies. It is wielded by dwarf and man, complete with their own ideas of justice, truth, and the spirit.
The Light is not evil. The Light does not 'demand'. The Light is the Light. What we do with it on Azeroth is our own.
I suspect that even the Draenei are not as 'pure' as Anne has depicted them. Velen, from my own encounters on Azeroth, is not infallible. He does appear, however, to be a good person, dedicated to the Light. Not the Naaru, mind you, the Light. There is a difference.
A perfected Azeroth is one without life. The easiest way to achieve that, rather than machinations upon machinations, is to destroy all life. This is a purported goal of the Burning Legion in lore. If it is the ultimate goal of the Naaru, they would be better served by joining the Legion than opposing it.
Boobah Mar 5th 2012 1:22AM
You may have missed it, but part and parcel of Anne's "E'lune the naaru" hypothesis is that An'she, another naaru and provisionally named in honor of the Tauren sun goddess, was isolated on the eastern side of the Maelstrom when the Well of Eternity blew, and introduced the worship of the Light to the early humans, who by modern times somehow remembered Tir but not An'she.
It's well established that dwarves and high elves learned of the Light from their human allies.
As for the goodness of the draenei; the fact of the matter is, if they're tempted, the Burning Legion is still recruiting from among them, as shown in the Aldor quest chain in Netherstorm. The fact that they haven't drunk the fel kool-aid is very nearly proof enough that they are that good.
And while a lifeless Azeroth is likely fairly static, I can't agree that such a thing would be perfection.