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 4 of 6)
wizlynjonstar Mar 30th 2012 10:00AM
I would really love to see Alliance fanboys and fangirls reaction to the Horde, even for a needed purpose (Siege of Undercity or removing Garrosh), marching and killing in an Alliance capitol. My guess see every Alliance player's Cata post.
Thraim Mar 28th 2012 2:30PM
Nice write up. I'm a pretty unapologetic Varian "fanboi", so I really enjoyed reading this.
clundgren Mar 28th 2012 2:30PM
I really hope they don't make Varian as central to MoP as they made Thrall in Cataclysm. Even fans of Thrall have gotten sick of him at this point. I'd just like to see him retired to Outland.
Please, please, please keep us out of Varian's thoughts and feelings. The questline where we effectively psychoanalyzed Thrall was just too much. Varian's story is obviously important to MoP, but hopefully not at the expense of our own stories, or we will start hating him, too.
Noyou Mar 28th 2012 2:54PM
"The questline where we effectively psychoanalyzed Thrall was just too much."
I'm either really bad at reading quest text or I missed this one completely.
minduim Mar 28th 2012 4:40PM
Too lazy to search for the first quest in the chain right now, but it's the one that includes this: http://www.wowhead.com/quest=29328
Neothanos Mar 28th 2012 3:50PM
I would like to see Varian get his moment on the spotligth. Figthing either Garrosh or the power that corruptes him. An Epic Duelbetwwen the two would be very cool.
anonymous Mar 28th 2012 2:47PM
Haaay Gurrlll. You're awesome, welcome to the Alliance.
anonymous Mar 28th 2012 2:53PM
Woops, I meant "you're COOL" not awesome. Regardless, welcome to the Alliance.
mason.jdouglas Mar 28th 2012 2:51PM
Well, you made Varian sound like slightly better than a terribly conceived King for the humans. Just slightly though.
The problem is, that if the Alliance goes into Orgrimmar in any force, it makes no sense that they don't destroy it. You don't go into Berlin, remove Hitler and put some guy in charge who closes the concentration camps, but still has aims towards world conquest.
Nope, you cripple the capital, topple the government and win the war.
As alliance, we shouldn't be countering fury with fury (Worgen excepted); we should be countering it with unity and grim resolve. Varian just can't do that... He's all horde style, and he'll never be a proper Alliance Leader... (Though he and Genn could switch races and be passable as what each other should be... mind you, I like Genn as is.... still think it was dumb to introduce and kill off Liam so quick... he had some real potential.)
I mean, you could give Varian a makeover... retcon that STUPID Lo'Gosh thing, give him proper well-groomed royal's hair instead of a ratty ponytail, and give him his father's shield to wield. Get rid of that lingering teenage angst he's full of and instil him with a sense of grim determination and a realization that HE, and HIS kingdom are the last bastion of humanity in all the world. A determination born from his history of tragic loss, and you'd have a King I'd follow on a suicide mission into Orgrimmar.
But.... that's just too big a retcon for Varian to be believable. I say have the alliance incursion into Orgrimmar end with Varian going all Leonidas. (We get Garrosh but Varian dies too, and are driven out of Orgrimmar.) Have Anduin take up Lothar's Sword, and his Grandfather's shield, become a Paladin and be a proper Alliance/Human leader.
Varian had loads of potential since Warcraft 2, but I feel they just put him down too much of a Horde themed path and it's too late to fix it. (No matter how hard they try in this upcoming questline.) Also, the kign should be accompanied by 7th Legion soldiers, not SI:7 guys. They're both cool, but one fits better with the public figurehead of the Alliance.
mibu.work1 Mar 28th 2012 3:50PM
while I agree with most of your sentiment, I don't think the situation is hopeless. I think there's potential for real character development.
We need to simply see Varien out more in the game world, because having him zipping around via EU content isn't going to cut it. The whole 'Lo'gosh' angle could have worked well, but it didn't. The problem is that Varien was supposed to be a mirror to Thrall. Both were taken out of the usual element of their species, both were enslaved by their enemies, both had the blood of leaders in their veins, both fought as gladiators for the enjoyment of others, both escaped with the help of friends to learn their destiny, forever influenced by their enemy's culture. The difference was supposed to be that Thrall saw the best and worst of what the Humans had to offer (Tareetha and Sergent vs. Blackmoore), whereas Varian saw only the worst of the Horde, the part that allows gladiatorial combat, enslavement, and brutal treatment of prisoners. The problem is that Varian's foil, Thrall, ascended into being equal parts Bruce Banner, Moses and Aang (cheers if you get the reference), whereas Varien stayed a fury warrior with a title.
When Garrosh became Varian's foil in Cataclysm, it was a poor match. They seemed too alike, and while Garrosh got some humanizing (orcanising?) moments in Stonetalon and Ashenvale to balance everything else a little, Varien has not gotten any in-game development. He's still the brutal fury warrior he was, and is now matched by a big brown Arms warrior, and neither one is much more than that. Both are products of their own time, with Varien being stuck somewhere in Orcs and Humans, and Garrosh being somewhere in WC II. Think of Thrall as being in Frozen thone and the playerbase being somewhere in Broodwar in this madcap analogy.
clundgren Mar 28th 2012 4:59PM
@Mason,
While I don't agree with your entire comment, I love your suggestion that Varian "take up his father's shield." Symbolically speaking, the shift from fury warrior to protection warrior would be a great metaphor for Varian's journey from vengeance-obsessed berserker to leader and protector of the entire Alliance. It would also emphasize the contrast with Garrosh, who seems to be unable to contain his rage.
It would make for a great visual, as well.
Killik Mar 28th 2012 5:49PM
It's genuinely weird that Garrosh has been written more chances to take a moral stance on issues like civilian casualties during Cataclysm than Varian has. I mean, admittedly it's generally in the context of having to clear up after his subordinates go off the deep end, but still...
In other news, the phrase "EU content" has me imagining Varian Wrynn lounging around eating croissants next to the Eiffel Tower...
clundgren Mar 28th 2012 5:59PM
They need to do something about Westfall. When a huge portion of your population is suffering right on the doorstep of your newly expanded castle, it doesn't make you look good. Every time I play through Westfall I wind up agreeing with Vanessa Van Cleef's perspective, if not her methods.
Part of redeeming Varian should be fixing Westfall, or at least showing that he cares and is trying to help. For all his failings, it's hard to imagine Garrosh allowing that level of neglect of an Orc population.
Transit Mar 28th 2012 2:58PM
@Matthew Rossi
So wait, I am confused.
Is this article written from Varian's perspective then? And not actual events? When Lorderon fell, did the Alliance believe the scourge and the orcs were allied? That is interesting.
So how did Alliance end up working together with the orcs in Hyjal if they thought the Orcs were allied with the scourge? Or did this perception of the Orcs and Scourge come later? After the wraithgate?
Matthew Rossi Mar 28th 2012 3:02PM
The article is written with actual events, but it points out Varian's perspective. Varian doesn't KNOW everything you do as a player, he only knows what he has seen and experienced and been informed about. He knows that Sylvanas is the ruler of the Undercity, that she's a part of the Horde, and that she's torturing and murdering Alliance citizens. He's seen them in cages when he invaded Undercity to kill Putress after he and Varimathras (a demon of the Burning Legion who supposedly served Sylvanas) usurped the city.
So from Varian's perspective, there's no real difference between the Forsaken and the Scourge. Why would he believe otherwise? What has he seen to make him think otherwise? He's seen Lordaeron when he lived there, and he's seen what it is now, and he knows Sylvanas reports back to the Warchief of the Horde. That's his perspective.
DragonFireKai Mar 28th 2012 3:11PM
No, the Alliance sees the Horde as responsible for the actions of its client races, namely, the Forsaken. The Alliance looks upon the once proud nation of Lordearon and sees it overwhelmed with genocidal monsters who slaughter the surviving citizens of Lordaeron indiscriminately. The Alliance sees those abominations, and sees them given shelter and support by the orcs as they march across eastern kingdoms committing atrocities with impunity. Necromancy, Biological warfare, treachery, mind control, kidnapping, genocide, vivisection, consorting with demons, and many other evil acts are laid at the feet of the Horde in their occupation of Lordaeron, and the Orcs, as the preeminent power within the Horde, bear their share of the blame.
According to many players, the Orcs are the Horde. The Warchief MUST be an orc, by many accounts. If the Horde is committing atrocities, then the Orcs are responsible.
Transit Mar 28th 2012 3:17PM
That is interesting. What do you think the Horde feels about Dwarves then? Do they lump all dwarves in with the Dark Irons? (Torturing people, etc.)
Technically the Dark Irons are now a part of the alliance in a very real way.
clundgren Mar 28th 2012 5:16PM
The question of the Dark Irons is a fair one, but I note that we have a tendency to look past the evils of our own allies in the real world, so I imagine it is no different in the World of Warcraft. After all, when it served our purposes, the West was willing to embrace Stalin himself as a necessary evil in stopping Hitler.
No one's hands are going to be totally clean, but there are degrees.
It's also a fair question exactly how much Varian knows about the inner workings of the Horde. He has a lot of personal experience to draw on, but he also has an excellent intelligence service, probably the best in Azeroth. Is he aware that the Forsaken are using the plague in defiance of Garrosh, and even that some factions of the Forsaken are using it in defiance of Sylvanas? Is he aware of the tension between the Drek'Thar and Garrosh (the Frostwoves are all but ready to leave the Horde because of the Forsaken, as the Hillsbrad questline makes clear)?
I don't think it's quite fair to suggest that Varian's perspective is entirely limited to that which he has directly experienced. He's seen the worst of the Horde, it's true, but he's also aware that Saurfang helped lead the combined armies of the Alliance and Horde to victory in Silithus. He knows that the rogue Forsaken attacked the Horde at the same time as the Alliance. He seems to have a fair degree of respect for Baine and Vol'jin. Varian has often acted on impulse, but there have also been times when he has shown moderation, and I suspect that his character arc will allow him to grow beyond seeing the world as "Horde bad."
Boobah Mar 28th 2012 5:30PM
What we know about the current state of the Dark Irons is questionable, since so much of Blackrock Mountain is still stuck in vanilla WoW.
Moira seems to think she is the one in charge of the Blackrock Depths, but we know that there are Dark Irons running around that are still loyal to Ragnaros (or were until we killed him). I don't think we really know enough to tell whether they really are a splinter group, if Moira's delusional, or if Moira's using the "Ragnaros loyalists" as an excuse for dirty tricks.
Killik Mar 28th 2012 6:52PM
@Boobah Hopefully she's using it to cover dirty tricks. I'd like very much if Moira inherited the mantle of 'WoW's only permitted intriguing female character', now that Sylvanas is practically monologuing and twirling her moustachios.
Of course, would the Alliance be permitted to have an interesting storyline with moral ambivalence and political dirty tricks? Or are they stuck forever as the faction of gold armour, shiny swords, pure hearts and no plans?
And am I setting myself up for disappointment in a game's plot that, let's face it, is aimed at 12-year-olds?