Pandarens were in WC3 because they were meant to be a joke.poiumty said:What "modern lore" are you talking about? Pandarens were there since Warcraft III. Are you saying WoW turned "sissy casual" since The Frozen Throne came along?RhanathShadowhand said:As you can read above, it wasn't really really supposed to be included, but it was the fans who wanted pandas. Feel free to cry some more about pandas being the lore. They have never been a part of the original lore, and they'll never be part of the original lore. Only the modern lore.
Please say that, I want to point and laugh at someone.
Samwise's answer to question:
Question said:A lot of people may not know the illustrious history of the pandaren race and their introduction in the Warcraft III expansion. Can you give a brief recap of how you got the idea for an anthropomorphic panda race and how they eventually came to be included in the expansion?
Samwise Didier said:I might never have had the idea if it weren't for my brother's fantastic skill at mangling up words and phrases. "A flash in the pants" or "at the end of my wit" are some of the classics in my brother's repertoire of manglings and mash-ups.
We were all off on a weekend desert trip and come evening everyone was grouped up around the fire. I was off doing something and my bro, who already had a few Stormstouts in him, said something like
"Dude, you're like one of those panda bears -- you're never cold."
I said "Do you mean a polar bear?"
He muttered something like "I said polar bear" or whatever, but from that moment on, I was judged and labeled as: The Panda.
Some years later I did a Christmas picture for my family of a panda bear with a cub sitting on his shoulder in tribute to the new daughter who had joined our clan. That was the first panda picture I did.
For some reason, one of our webmasters asked if it could be made into a Blizzard wallpaper. People seemed to like it well enough so that when April Fools came around we announced that the pandaren were going to be the fifth race for Warcraft III. People got excited by the announcement, and seemed to be let down when they found out it was just a joke.
Question said:In your personal work you'll literally represent yourself quite often as a Pandaren, and in other pieces you use them as easter eggs. Do you think of them as an icon or calling card for your work now?
They are officialy a part of "lore" since Mists of Pandaria. Modern Lore starts from the beginning of World of Warcraft.Samwise Didier said:It all started when we were working on the art books. In the Art of Warcraft book they had highlighted a picture I did that had some hidden names, faces, and such in it.
I've always done things like that, but this was the first time we blatantly pointed it out.
From then on people started looking for hidden faces or pandas in my pictures. It is pretty funny now because people are seeing things in everything. Even on art that I didn't work on people are saying, "Look! There's a panda face!"
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The development was pretty painless, at least on my end. A pencil drawing for the front, side, and back of Chen as well as details for his gear, and that was about all. The face needed a few more iterations to it to help out the sculptor and that was really it.
The sculpting of Chen is special to me as the Pandaren was originally just created for my family and friends. It was done just for fun, as a joke. To have this personal piece of art become a page or two in the massive volumes of Blizzard Entertainment lore is an honor. And to have it embraced by so much of our community is a really great feeling. Some still think of the Pandaren as the Aprils Fools gag, while others think they should be the next race for World of Warcraft (Horde, naturally).
But whatever your views, just remember this... if my brother was a better speaker then the pandaren race might never have been born. Cheers to you brother!