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Posts Tagged ‘Lore’

Blizzard announces holiday card contest

November 12th, 2009

Blizzard has made it a holiday tradition to release a holiday card every year (usually drawn by Samwise), but this year they’re putting a little twist on it. They’re running a contest asking the potential artists among you to submit your own original Blizzard-themed holiday card. Download their template, fill it up with Diablo, Starcraft, or Warcraft-related holiday art (no Lost Vikings or Rock N’ Roll Racing art, apparently), submit it on the contest page before December 7th, and you can win a whole slew of prizes from Blizzard and Razer, including a mouse, keyboard, and headset, as well as a signed copy of Blizzard’s 2009 holiday card from Samwise himself.

So artists, get to, um, “art”-ing! We can’t wait to see your rendition of Deathwing as Santa Claus, Kerrigan as the Mrs., and a whole tribe of Fallen Ones standing in for the little elves.

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Excerpt of the Stormrage Novel available online

September 1st, 2009

I already mentioned that there’s an excerpt from the upcoming Stormrage novel in the back of TokyoPop’s Warcraft Legends Volume 5 manga, but if you’re anxious to get yet another glimpse before February 2010, you’re in luck. Pocket Books has posted a new excerpt over at their site, and all you need to grab is an email address.

The excerpt doesn’t reveal any new lore per se, but it does tease pretty damn well, and should bring up some pretty nostalgic memories for a lot of Alliance players. Combine this with the excerpt from the manga, and you’ll get a pretty good idea of where the story’s going, I think — Right into the Heart of the Emerald Nightmare, as we confirmed with authour Richard Knaak at BlizzCon a week ago.

As to whether it will cover the Cataclysm, or not, that’s a bit up in the air. However, considering we know that Malfurion will be back in the waking world fighting Ragnaros at Hyjal, chances would seem to be good.

You can check out the excerpt at Simon and Schuster’s website.

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“Zero lore. Maximum fun.” with Onxyia back in town

August 17th, 2009

When the news first broke yesterday about Onyxia returning to her status as a raid boss, I, probably like many of you, went into lore-generation overdrive. She’s dead in the comic (Varian Wrynn decided her head didn’t so much belong with her body any more), so how was she going to be a raid boss? I stabbed at ideas: she’s in the Caverns of Time! Arthas could resurrect her as a Frostwyrm of some kind!

Fortunately, cooler lore-heads (Ziebart and Sacco) prevailed: they pointed out to me this comment by Maxim in the original post: “Zero lore. Maximum fun. HOORAY!” That perfectly sums up why Blizzard is doing this: there’s no lore reason or explanation behind it, it’s just a straight up fun thing for us to do to celebrate the five-year anniversary. Bornakk makes it official: Ony is still dead, and she’s not coming back. This is a one-time thing on the 5th anniversary.

While, unfortunately, that may destroy some dreams about seeing similar old-world content come back to life (at least until the 10th anniversary, when we’ll probably see Molten Core updated for the level 100 15-man raiding scheme — drool), it means that there’s no thinking involved about why Onyxia’s back. She’s back, we get to raid the original raid and pick up some great loot while doing it. Zero lore. Maximum fun.

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Patch 3.2: Enter Trag Highmountain

June 30th, 2009

When I’m not playing WoW, I’m usually found indulging in manga and have been devouring the Warcraft series ever since the Sunwell Trilogy came out. Of all the characters introduced through comics and manga, the most tragic next to Anveena has to be Trag Highmountain. I’ve watched over the last year as more characters from the print franchises began to appear in-game, and there’s something about seeing them translated into the game which gives me an amazing thrill.

We’ve met Anveena and her soul mate Kalec, Tyri and Jorad as well as Broll and that Blood Elf chick whose always hanging around Varian, so I’ve often wondered when Trag would turn up. It’s inevitable given how his quest to Icecrown is in keeping with Wrath of the Lich King. Imagine my surprise when I logged on to the PTR for the first time this morning to find one Tauren Death Knight standing guard over one of the incapacitated forms of one of the Coliseum bosses.

Yes, it’s our old friend Trag, now a level 80 NPC. While seeming hostile, he makes no move to attack the Alliance or speak, he just seems to stand near Gormok the Impaler. I’m sure he’ll get some lines by the time Patch 3.2 goes live though. Having not yet read Warcraft: Legends’ final volume, I’m curious to find out what happened to him but it’s nice to know he’s finally free of the Lich King’s thrall.

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The best zone of Wrath

June 4th, 2009


Spinksville, following up to an earlier post concerning a great lore moment in Vengeance Landing, concludes that as a Horde player, Howling Fjord has emerged as the single best overall zone in Wrath. The more I consider it, the more I’m inclined to agree with her. The Fjord has a mostly unified questline that slowly splits off into sub-plots concerning the Kalu’ak and Taunka, and the farther you get, the more you realize the impact your previous actions have had on that little slice of the world (and most of it’s not good). As Spinks observes, it’s a very immersive experience that does a great job of conveying both the moral ambiguity of the Forsaken’s position, and the fact that Northrend’s a continent without a lot of good options. “Forced to choose between the lesser evil and the greater evil,” she writes, “… you had better hope that the greater evil is very bad indeed because it is the only way to justify the things you have had to do.”

That said, I have to admit that Icecrown is also pretty tough to beat lore-wise (with the Matthias Lehner quests being a particularly good touch, and please don’t click that link if you haven’t run into him yet). I haven’t yet played an Alliance toon through Northrend, and Spinks is also a Horde player, so I’d like to get some input from Alliance-side players too. Is the Fjord as good for Alliance as it is for Horde, or are your best questlines elsewhere? If you’re Horde, do you agree that the Fjord was your best questing experience?

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Are we being teased about the next expansion?

April 6th, 2009

So there’s been a feeling in the air lately that some of the blues have been in a bit of a teasing mood. Sure, that’s not neccessarily new, but what is interesting is what exactly they may be teasing us about. For example, here’s a recent post in which one Sulmus of Aerie Peak asks for the Greymane Wall to be opened. Zarhym soon jumps in to say that they would be “out of their mind” to open the wall… then follows up with random ellipses. To top it all off, Bornakk and Crygil jump in with silly punctuation of their own.

Now when Alex and I were discussing this the other day, Alex insisted that they were basically admitting that the Greymane wall would be opened, likely in conjunction with the next expansion. He says it’s already in the planning stages, and the blues are just waving the knowledge tantalizingly out of sight because they’re not allowed to officially announce it yet. Now, at first I wasn’t really on board with it, but then I noticed another post Zarhym commented in.

Imani of Aerie Peak posted a thread with the aim of advocating for more Old World content along the style of the Un’goro detour or Stormwind Harbor in Wrath. With the Maelstrom, she said, Blizzard should focus on fleshing out different areas of the old world, such as Gilneas, Azshara, and Grim Batol, weaving them in with new expansion content to give a sense of continuity. It’s certainly a good idea to begin with, but what caught my eye is that Zarhym himself commented that it was a good post, thus surreptitiously tagging the thread with the air of officiality via blue text and providing a tacit endorsement of the idea.

Now of course, Zarhym’s not a member of the dev team proper, and he could just simply be saying he thinks it’s a cool idea (because it is), but considering his other post, I can’t help but wonder if Alex had a point. Maybe these are ways to say, “Yeah, we’re headed to the Maelstrom and filling out Azeroth for the next expansion, but we can’t tell you that officially, so here, have some oblique references and teasing!”

It could all be wishful thinking, sure. Maybe the blues are just having some fun and commenting on some cool ideas, but still, I’m thinking I’d put good odds on a Maelstrom-related announcement at the next BlizzCon. Time will tell, but I’m starting to feel sort of optimistic.

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