Know Your Lore: The hour of the king

The King of Stormwind wears the crown on a troubled brow. He inherited the mantle as a child, not through a peaceful succession but through bloody violence and the destruction of his home. He wore it in exile and only came home with the death of the man who saved him and carried him away from the sight of his entire world burned to the ground. His entire life has been shaped by violent loss, by tragedy and death -- his mother dead before he even knew her, his father murdered and butchered in front of him, his replacement fathers cut down, his wife taken from him in a moment's passing by an errant rock thrown from a mob.
His early rule was most notable by his lack of desire to actually do much rulership, busying himself by riding the land in search of his father's killer or drifting though a haze of loss after his wife's death, a haze seized upon and manipulated by someone who was supposed to be a close advisor. The circumstances of his disappearance from the throne and his return have been discussed in detail. For now, all we need to do is accept that they did little to encourage him to view the throne as anything but a responsibility to be maintained in the face of constant peril.
Following the Northrend campaign and its heavy cost both to King Varian and the kingdom as a whole (Bolvar's death, as well as the many deaths at the Wrathgate; the invasion of Undercity and the destruction of Putress; Horde troops ambushing Alliance forces engaged with the Scourge; the astonishing cost in lives and resources), it would have been difficult for either the King or the kingdom to quickly recover. The eruption of Deathwing and the Cataclysm he caused did not allow the luxury of time. Reeling from one blow, they suffered another and another.
How it ends for Wrynn kings
Let's list off the things Varian has experienced or even directly acted upon during the time following the fall of the Lich King:
- He led a dream army of the greatest warriors in the Horde and the Alliance to battle the Emerald Nightmare as it manifested on Azeroth.
- He defended Stormwind from the elemental invasion that presaged the Cataclysm and led a small force of Alliance veterans to kill Kai'ju Gahz'rilla and Prince Sarsarun, respectively.
- He invaded an occupied Ironforge to rescue his son from Moira Thaurissan (not being aware that Anduin had already escaped) and, with a small band of SI:7 agents, effectively toppled Moira and forced the creation of the Council of Three Hammers.
- He reconciled with Genn Greymane and the people of Gilneas (the Worgen) and defended Ashenvale from a Horde offensive under Garrosh Hellscream, disarming the Horde leader in single combat.
- He dealt with an assassination attempt by the Twilight Prophet and his Twilight's Hammer forces. This attempt nearly killed Varian and would have, had his son Anduin not called upon the Holy Light to rescue him from his grievous wounds.

His relationship with his son Anduin (named for Anduin Lothar) has revealed that in many ways, Varian is consumed with fear that he will lose his son the way he has lost everyone else he's ever loved. His experiences in the novel Wolfheart show just how driven by the fear of that kind of loss Varian is and how much he had to do to find it in himself to face that fear and the rage that created it.
No matter how dark, it can get darker
Contrasting Varian to his current chief rival, Garrosh Hellscream, we see immediately that Varian's entire life has been defined by violence that in many ways was directed against him and his people by orcs just like Garrosh. Blackhand the Destroyer and Orgrim Doomhammer led the orcish Horde that burned his city and did so not for any slight the humans of Stormwind had ever offered them. No, the orcs of the Horde attacked humanity and burned their city entirely because they'd already destroyed their own world in service to pure evil.
Doomhammer killed Anduin Lothar after the hero had driven the Horde back from the very walls of Lordaeron, where a very young orphan named Varian Wrynn was sheltered following his father's assassination. The repeated losses of his life -- of family, loved ones, even replacement figures -- have made Varian someone who would do anything to avoid losing anyone else. Every death (like Bolvar's) that touches his life is an agony to be endured.
This is how it ends for Wrynn kings.
Varian's anger has all too often left his own people afraid of him. Strangely enough, despite his noted antipathy for the Horde, it's often led individual members of the Horde to respect him (as in his working with Baine Bloodhoof and other Horde warriors during the Emerald Nightmare's invasion), because it's so similar to how they view leadership and a leader's proper behavior. But during and after the events of his near assassination, we saw a Varian who had finally come to terms with who he had been, who he now was, and who he needed to become. Despite his real and genuine rage and fear over what has been taken from him, we see a Varian growing to terms with his lot in life.
Death stalks the throne of Stormwind
Varian has never really had a great mentor -- or, more accurately, he's lost them. His father's death would have been traumatic enough if he had not witnessed it, witnessed Garona Halforcen cutting Llane's heart out, because becoming king at such a young age basically meant that he stopped being the child he still was. Even Arthas Menethil noticed that when Varian came to stay in Lordaeron, Varian did not at all act like a child. How could he? But that loss was compounded, and compounded again.

It had been Terenas Menethil who had convinced Varian to stand against Genn Greymane and Thoras Trollbane, who wanted to wipe out the orcs entirely after the Second War. The orcs rewarded Terenas for his mercy by helping defile everything he ever had. Storming into Lordaeron, Varian saw the horrors the Forsaken casually inflict upon anyone who comes into their clutches, huddled victims in cages poisoned and murdered by Putress and the Royal Apothecary Society to develop new plagues, including the one that killed Bolvar and the other Alliance soliders at the Wrathgate. He saw the confirmation of his entire life's experiences, the evidence that even dignity or the sovereignty of your own flesh can be stolen from you.
Dying to live free
Ironically, through his attempt to kill Varian and his son, Archbishop Benedictus accidentally allowed Varian to take the lessons learned in the Howling Oak to heart. Genn's introduction of the worgen ritual allowed Varian to channel his rage on his own terms, but it was Benedictus' bringing Anduin and Varian together (although he did so hoping to kill them both) that allowed Varian to finally let go of the fear of loss that crippled and hindered him as a king and a leader.
Perhaps it was because he managed to prevent his son's death at the near cost of his own life, and in so doing, managed for once to cheat the fate that seemed to dog him his whole life. He did not lose Anduin that day. Varian accepted his fate -- this is how it ends for Wrynn kings -- that he would die in front of his son as his own father had died in front of him, but at least his death would buy his son life, as his father's death had managed to buy Varian escape from the burning city of Stormwind.

But the king must rise above trading blow for blow, loss for loss. Lothar did not lash out in fury or vengeance; he acted to protect his people. Terenas knew when to put down the sword, that wanton butchery inflicted upon the people of the Alliance did not mean the Alliance could or should embrace it in return. Now Varian has learned, slowly and fitfully, that resolve does not have to be rooted in rage, that determination can exist without vengeance, that protecting those in your charge can be done without losing control. In battle, yes, the wolf, but never rabid.
When Varian marches on Orgrimmar, he will not come as Lo'Gosh or even Goldrinn. He will not come as Doomhammer, who burns everything and murders innocents. He will not even come as Garona, a knife in the heart. Varian will come to Orgimmar as Varian Wrynn, King of Stormwind, who once watched his own city burn, and he will not force another child to watch the same.
But come to Orgrimmar he shall, because soon is the hour of the king.
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: Analysis / Opinion, Lore, Know your Lore, Wrath of the Lich King, Cataclysm, Worgen, Mists of Pandaria






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 6)
Sumadin Mar 28th 2012 2:08PM
I actually really hope the orgrimmar raid ends up with a showdown between Garrosh and Varian. Garrosh is not our prey, he is Varians. I would be happy if i was just set to deal with whoever turns out to really be behind all this(Magetha Grimtotem would be a prime contender IMHO).
Shepherd57 Mar 28th 2012 2:46PM
If we want to see growth, it would be better for someone else, say 10 or 25 some one elses, to defeat Garrosh and King Varian to simply be glad tha the threat is at an end.
Atanae Mar 28th 2012 2:49PM
The last boss of an xpac usually has NPC intervention. However, that is not to say that Garrosh will die at Varian Wrynn's hand. Several outcomes are feasible:
1) Wrynn defeats Garrosh a second time and motions to have Garrosh taken prisoner. Garrosh is poisoned instead by, most likely, the dark forces in alignment with the Dark Shaman. A fitting end to a leader who "earned" his title as Warchief through similar means.
2) Wrynn defeats Garrosh a second time ... yadda yadda ... Garrosh is inexplicably whisked away by force/s unknown, later to return in a future expansion as a "boss" of the Burning Legion. This would be a call-back to Grom's ties to the Legion *and* Blizzard could enact Garrosh's rescue and redemption (as a counterpoint to, say, Staghelm). Blizzard has several "rescue/redeem" bosses.
3) Wrynn defeats Garrosh a second time ... yadda yadda ... and Zul'jin kills Garrosh in open combat, knowing that Garrosh would be a wedge that would ultimately divide the Horde. This way, the Horde retains honor, the "mantle" of Warchief is passed in a Horde-acceptable manner and both factions save face. I don't see Baine doing this (even to "avenge" his father, but I do see Zul'jin offering himself as a proxy and ultimately passing authority to Baine (since I see Zul'jin as wanting the freedom to do what he needs to do and not be shackled by the burdens of Warchief).
What I do not foresee is Garrosh being held prisoner by Wrynn. That would be an unfortunate tableau. Also, Blizzard made great effort to tell Garrosh's story, and if they play their cards right he could still be extremely useful for quite a while. After all, Sunwell didn't so much "end" TBC as it set the stage for the next Legion-focused expansion.
mason.jdouglas Mar 28th 2012 2:56PM
While I'm all for seeing Zul'Jin make a BIG meaningful comeback and be a wicked lore figure instead of wasted in a single boss encounter....I think you meant Vol'Jin.
It's funny how often I see people getting those names mixed up. I think that says something about how much people loved Zul'Jin.
Personally, I lvoe both of those trolls though. Both excellent figures with lots of lore potential.
mason.jdouglas Mar 28th 2012 2:57PM
While I'm all for seeing Zul'Jin make a BIG meaningful comeback and be a wicked lore figure instead of wasted in a single boss encounter....I think you meant Vol'Jin.
It's funny how often I see people getting those names mixed up. I think that says something about how much people loved Zul'Jin.
Personally, I lvoe both of those trolls though. Both excellent figures with lots of lore potential.
Kelly Mar 28th 2012 3:02PM
For you Alliance, Varian vs Garrosh would be nice.
For we Horde... THRALL vs GARROSH! Finally get to finish what the Lich King interrupted all those years ago!
Ilmyrn Mar 28th 2012 3:35PM
Personally, I'd like to see Varian vs Garrosh, Varian wins, and we take Garrosh back to Stormwind in chains to stand trial for his crimes against the people of the Alliance. No vengeance, only justice.
Let him be hanged for all to see.
AROD Mar 28th 2012 6:15PM
Alliance cannot dictate the end of Garrosh (and cannot take him prisioner), it should be a member of the horde who determines the end of Garrosh rule. The reason behind this is because it would create a power vacuum within the horde (and I do not care how much they like each other each will push their own agenda) and the second reason is by simple saying of... "a king does not kill a king".
I think Alliance and Horde will march together to orc city and basically it will be a faction leader (I am betting the troll) will either kill him or severely wound Garrosh and by doing that (and because he had help from the alliance) he cannot become leader.
Thrall should not come back to the horde since he is a neutral faction leader and he has saved the world about 55k times in cata. It would be nice to see the cow become the new leader, but the horde has always been ruled by the orcs... so I imagine that we have not seen the new leader yet... or maybe it is the orc who lost his son in the wrathgate... he is an awesome figure. Sorry I am an alliance player hand have not played horde much.
Kaero Mar 29th 2012 12:39AM
Y'know what would kinda be cool to me? After Garrosh has been... "disposed of" (any which way that turns out), and there is officially nobody as Warchief (and for the sake of arguement, Thrall doesn't step up to the plate), I would like to see some kind of process that would see who all would nominate themselves to replace Garrosh, then perhaps some kind of vote take place to do so - even cooler if it were done in real life via battle.net accounts with paid subscriptions.
I'd vote for Vol'jin, because he's awesome in ways neither Thrall or Garrosh are, or Baine if he was confident enough. Sylvanas, though... I am a huge fan of hers, but even though I understand the motivation behind her current actions, I can't say she has the best intentions for... well, anyone not Forsaken.
Is there a chance we could have a silly proxy-vote like this on WoW Insider? A really fun KYL:TFH kinda thing, where we could see the platforms all potential runners would have, and a short "vote for me!" speech? It might take a whole week, but it'd be really fun!
brighthammer Mar 29th 2012 2:01AM
What I'd like to see is, after a long and hard fight, after we're all bloody, Garrosh's dark shaman decides to get them the hell out of dodge. As they're about to step through the portal, two figures step through and close it after them. Saurfang announces to the raid (varian too) that he swore he would kill hellscream if he tried to bring the horde down the same dark path again. Varian makes an "after you" gesture and says "I came to neutralize his threat, do what you will." Saurfang and Garrosh have a duel, after a bit garrosh knocks saurfang down and screams that the horde belongs to him.
-stabbing and wet coughing sounds-
Then Vol'jin unstealths behind him and says "I made you a promise too. I hope you didn't forget." Garrosh dies.
Xantenise Mar 28th 2012 2:11PM
Would be interesting to see what happens to Varian in the battle. I doubt it'd be as simple as killing Garrosh and leaving.
Ametrine Mar 28th 2012 2:21PM
Nothing's been said that Garrosh will die.
clundgren Mar 28th 2012 2:35PM
I really hope Garrosh doesn't die. Faction leader falling to temptation and being killed has been done to death. What about a character who actually lives to feel regret for his actions?
Although, I'm not sure Garrosh, as written has that depth. Okay, have him die, but give him some sort of redemption in death. Since he has made it clear that he would die for the Horde, let him do so.
Xantenise Mar 28th 2012 2:50PM
@Ametrine Hence why I said "I doubt it'd be as simple as killing Garrosh and leaving." What could possibly lead Varian to NOT kill Garrosh?
gewalt Mar 28th 2012 9:03PM
the same thing that led to varian not killing thrall.
JAINA
clundgren Mar 29th 2012 4:46AM
When was Varian going to kill Thrall?
Do you mean in UC? Why do you assume Varian would win that fight? My money would be on Thrall. He's the most OP of the faction leaders this side of Velen.
Noyou Mar 28th 2012 2:31PM
Very nicely done. I dearly wish more of this was handled in game. Especially:
"He invaded an occupied Ironforge to rescue his son from Moira Thaurissan (not being aware that Anduin had already escaped) and, with a small band of SI:7 agents, effectively toppled Moira and forced the creation of the Council of Three Hammers."
This write up actually makes me want to check out the books.
Swifteye Mar 28th 2012 3:04PM
To be honest, I *really* want to read "Wolfheart"... and I've *almost* bought it a good number of times, only to remember at the last moment that Knaack's writing style gives me hives.
Shame, really; I think Varian is a rather fascinating lore character and, durnit, though I may be Horde and he may be a big blustery lout, I'd still like to see things go well for him after all the mega-suck in his life...
WTB Christie Golden re-write of "Wolfheart"! :(
LynMars Mar 28th 2012 3:46PM
I've heard Wolfheart is actually a decent book; Knaak may have had a bit more oversight than in previous, like Stormrage and earlier books.
The Shattering, where Noyou's quoted bit is from, is by Cristie Golden, so is pretty good.
Insofar as tie-in novels. Golden's a good author (I keep meaning to look up here own non-tie-in writing), but there's always something about tie-ins that seems to hamper the writing, usually because the authors are given specific directions and limits. While new things come from them (Golden's characterizations of Thrall and Anduin are what I think have made them so popular and given them more story), overall, it's an author writing someone else's story and characters. I know for me, that's a bit of a crimp.
Noyou Mar 28th 2012 8:56PM
I read Knaak's earlier works, Kaz the Minotaur and Legend of Huma and those were pretty good. I think I am far less a critic of the writers I read. I may be a little more critical now after having written a little of my own. To me it's more about how the characters work than all the fluffy details. I kind of compare it to fast food- you know it's not a 4 star meal, but it's tasty and it gets the job done. With the WoW books, if I read those, I will be reading it more for the lore facts than for how alive or balanced he makes any of the characters.