Pandaren lore and what we know so far

At present, the peoples of Pandaria, from the mogu to the mantid, the virmen and the hozen, are mostly unknown to us. Of these races, the pandaren are most familiar, and even then this is purely due to the actions of one pandaren who came to Kalimdor and walked alongside Rexxar and his allies, Chen Stormstout. But what do we know about the pandaren and their ancient homeland of Pandaria?

More than 12,000 years ago, when the kaldorei were still stumbling upon the Well of Eternity, the mogu had already conquered a swath of territory and enslaved everything in it. Little is as yet known of the mogu, aside from their love of brutality and their belief that the strongest (themselves) should dominate the weak (everyone else).
One of the peoples enslaved in mogu territory were the ancient pandaren. Despite the mogu's having forbidden their slaves from bearing arms of any kind, the pandaren played to their strengths and organized a rebellion, learning to suborn their masters' control by developing the ability to fight without weapons, to harness the mysteries of chi, and to exploit the mogu's arrogance and brutality. In time, the pandaren rose up, and after a vicious struggle, cast the mogu down. The imperial structure that the mogu had established, the pandaren eventually seized and remade in their own image.
When the War of the Ancients saw the demons of the Burning Legion swarm across the ancient continent of Kalimdor, the last pandaren emperor found a way to protect his lands and his people from the looming disaster. This deal with fate, as it has been described, is as mysterious to us as the land it saved, but we know that it created the mists that separated Pandaria from the rest of Azeroth and somehow insulated the land from the devastation of the Sundering. The Mist lasted for 10,000 years, and however it was created and maintained, its presence prevented anyone from finding Pandaria during that time. It's not clear exactly how, but the mists are said to have left Pandaria somehow haunted from the time of their creation.
Now that they are gone, the pandaren must for the first time in thousands of years deal with outsiders. Before this, only the wandering pandaren who settled on the great turtle Shen-zin Su and rode on the creature's titanic shell interacted with the outside world. Called the Wandering Isle, the mammoth terrapin is the home of Chen Stormstout and other pandaren who felt the need to leave Pandaria itself behind and experience the world beyond the mists. If you play a pandaren in Mists, you'll be playing a native of this mobile zone.

Pandaren culture is both contemplative and epicurean. They seek to master the flow of chi and the self via their martial arts yet eagerly live in the moment and enjoy the pleasures life has to offer. Balance is important to them, but so is action and the direction of the personal will to achieve one's goals. They enjoy combat and the art of the gourmand equally. Imagine if Brian Blessed were a panda.
Due to the existence of the sha, dread entities of manifested negative emotion, the pandaren tend toward a more controlled, less explosive temperament. Pandaren are not easily moved to lose their self-control or discipline. They love life and love to explore the pleasures it brings but keep the ideals of self control and balance close to heart as they do so.
Because every pandaren is at heart a bear with a deep capacity for anger, their culture emphasizes working to find compromises and forget grudges. In essence, they're deeply civilized and diplomatic because they know the consequences for losing that civility can be severe.

Pandaria itself is a vast land, and the Pandaren Empire seems to have endured for 10,000 years despite the lack of an emperor (the last one having made the deal with fate just before the Sundering). The pandaren honor and respect the august celestials, great spirits similar in some ways to the Ancients and Loa of the night elves and trolls respectively. These celestials are so ingrained into pandaren culture that they define themselves by which celestial they honor; for example, the Jade Serpent clan honors the Jade Serpent and lives in the Jade Forest.
The wandering pandaren who settled the Wandering Isle under Liu Lang generations ago do not honor a specific celestial in this way, but most of the pandaren of the mainland do. The ancient celestials are the Jade Serpent, the Black Ox, the Red Crane, the White Tiger and the Black Ox, although these may not be the only ones. The ancient empire has endured for 10,000 years, and even now, in the face of many threats both from Pandaria and abroad, the pandaren endure with good humor and zeal. There are also groups like the Shado-Pan and the Order of the Golden Lotus.
The faces of their people
It should be mentioned that two pandaren will be the faces and voices for their people to the outside world. Ji Firepaw, a member of the Houjin philosophy, will be the Horde representative of the pandaren from the Wandering Isle, while Aysa Cloudsinger of the Tushui will be the Alliance's introduction to her people. Both join a faction outside of their culture in order to not only introduce their own culture to the greater world but to learn and grow as well.
After 10,000 years, the pandaren must deal with that larger world ... and it must learn to deal with them as well.
It's open warfare between Alliance and Horde in Mists of Pandaria, World of Warcraft's next expansion. Jump into five new levels with new talents and class mechanics, try the new monk class, and create a pandaren character to ally with either Horde or Alliance. Look for expansion basics in our Mists FAQ, or dig into our spring press event coverage for more details!
Patch 5.3 interview with Ghostcrawler
Mystery of the Unborn Val'kyr
The latest patch 5.3 news
All of the latest Mists of Pandaria news





Reader Comments (Page 2 of 3)
heroralphwiggum Mar 22nd 2012 10:40AM
I agree. I don't feel like the majority of the races would "get" the concept of chi and balance. All the races that can be druids and shaman should be able to become monks and that's it. IMO, at least.
Ullaana Mar 22nd 2012 10:49AM
I think any race that can get drunk should be able to be monks.
Sarducci Mar 22nd 2012 10:50AM
There are already monks of other races in games, as NPCs.
Joakim Mar 22nd 2012 11:44AM
If any goblin happened across "the secret of monkyness" we can be absolutely positive the golbin in question quickly set up a "learn by mail"-business.
"Be a monk in 30 days! Money back guaranteed!*"
snarkygoldfish Mar 22nd 2012 1:00PM
Was Sarducci said.
The Scarlet Monastery has had scarlet monks running around since Vanilla, and go take a look in the Auchenei (sp?) Crypts sometime. The draenei have monks as well (which, being a deeply spiritual people, isn't all that surprising.)
I could very easily see some of the other races following this path. Whether as a means of self-control (Undead) or a new way to seek balance (Tauren / Night Elves)
angus Mar 27th 2012 4:35PM
because as soon a monks were discovered, every race sent representatives to learn this martial art to get a leg up on their adversaries.
Suzaku Mar 22nd 2012 10:27AM
There are probably only four August Celestials. At most five. They're very clearly based on the Four Symbols, which are prevalent a set of Chinese constellations: the Azure Dragon of the East, the Vermillion Bird of the South, the White Tiger of the East, and the Black Tortoise of the North. There is sometimes a fifth, the Yellow Dragon of the Center.
Blizzard put their own spin on it, of course: Yu'lon the Jade Dragon of the East, Chi Ji the Red Crane of the South, Niuzao the Black Ox of the West, and Xuen the White Tiger of the North.
One of the Scrolls of Lore staff members was at the Asian Press Tour and had some information on another figure of the Pandaren Empire, when it was less peaceful. Master Greenpaw was a devoted monk who was well respected and earned the title "Jadefist", however over time he gradually began treading a dark path, and became a rebel. This lead to a civil war in which many innocents were killed. He was finally stopped by High Elder Cloudfall of the Jade Temple.
Also, fun couple of notes. The two philosphies of the Wandering Isle pandaren, Huojin (Horde) and Tushui (Alliance) translate to "fire-metal" and "earth-water".
acthomas2401 Mar 22nd 2012 10:34AM
Now you've mentioned the Brian Blessed thing all i want is a Pandaran that yells " Gordon Alive"
Rich Mar 22nd 2012 12:10PM
"Impetuous boy! Oh well, who wants to live forever?.....DIIIIIVE!"
Joe Mar 22nd 2012 10:36AM
I'm pretty sure Blizzard hasn't said anything about it, but the Mogu have to be the Titan creations of the south, right?
I mean, from the images I've seen, they have that Titan-ish look about them and it wouldn't make sense for the Titans to have had no presence in whatever land-area Pandaria was way back then.
zackwbrandon Mar 22nd 2012 10:57AM
I'm hoping so. It would also be kinda cool to discover some ancient Titan terracotta army. These would be the enforcers that the Titans used for fighting off the Old Gods. But then, I'm just spitballing.
Hierakles Mar 22nd 2012 11:51AM
@Zack There is actually an achievement, [Show me your moves!] that requires you to "Defeat the Terracotta Army in Mogu'shan Vaults on Normal or Heroic difficulty without any member of the raid being hit by Devastating Arc, Stomp or Energizing Smash."
snarkygoldfish Mar 22nd 2012 1:02PM
We've already seen a sort of "Terra Cotta" army of sorts constructed by the Titans. Look around the Halls of Lightning sometime, just over the ledge. Vast rows of Iron Vrykul / Giants standing there at the ready -- it really evokes the look of those soldiers -- and I'm pretty sure that's what they were going for. :)
Boobah Mar 22nd 2012 3:05PM
Well, the guys in Halls of Lightning were produced by Titan methods, but not by the titans. The Iron Dwarves, Vrykul, and Giants were produced by the Yogg-Saron corrupted Loken.
And while it makes sense that there'd be a Titan presence in Pandaria, the records we've uncovered from Uldum, Ulduar, and Uldaman don't seem to support a major installation anywhere else on the planet, although that doesn't preclude relatively minor ones like the stations that oversee Sholozar and Un'Goro.
Travis from Blogatelle Mar 22nd 2012 10:42AM
I was wondering what you thought about this, good sir?
http://media.mmo-champion.com/images/news/2012/march/yaungol_in_kun-lai_summit.jpg
I know that it's feasible that the Pandaren met the Tauren and the Night Elves prior to the Sundering, but do we know anything about this race of Tauren relatives that seem to live on Pandaria? How did they get there? While I know the ancillary stuff isn't cannon, is there anything about these guys anywhere else? I'm really curious about these yak-like Tauren.
Suzaku Mar 23rd 2012 2:45AM
Already been explained offhand during the press tour. They evolved from the tauren that were caught in the region that would become Pandaria after the Sundering.
Pandaren definitely would've met the night elves and tauren, as well as trolls. It's been established that the pandaren were not fans of how careless the night elves were being with magic before the War of the Ancients.
Travis Mar 22nd 2012 10:46AM
I was wondering what you thought about this, good sir?
http://media.mmo-champion.com/images/news/2012/march/yaungol_in_kun-lai_summit.jpg
I know that it's feasible that the Pandaren met the Tauren and the Night Elves prior to the Sundering, but do we know anything about this race of Tauren relatives that seem to live on Pandaria? How did they get there? While I know the ancillary stuff isn't cannon, is there anything about these guys anywhere else? I'm really curious about these yak-like Tauren.
Joe Mar 22nd 2012 11:10AM
I doubt that the Yaungol will have much more detailed explanation of their origins than the Taunka of Northrend did (which is to say, not much).
Looks like there was just some sort of bovine-humanoid ancestor race that was widely spread throughout the pre-Sundering Kalimdor mega-continent (and was probably one of the few native races of Azeroth); but never had large populations or empires (which is why they don't show up very much in the historical records).
Then, after the Sundering, the different groups of bovine-humanoids were physically separated by oceans and underwent physical changes (by the various evolution-like processes that exist on Azeroth).
evoxpisces Mar 22nd 2012 11:12AM
I don't know about you guys but the more I learn about Pandaren and Monks the more I can't wait to play as a Pandaren Monk!
Kasperkage Mar 22nd 2012 11:39AM
I think Pandaren should not be able to select Warrior as a class, considering that their entire racial history has been based on a control of the emotions, rage generation would be an issue for them :P