You say "Orcs" as if they all agreed to do so, if you look back at the history of Draenor, the orcs lived in peaceful shamanistic society.The Madman said:Orcs used Dranei as their practice run before invading Azeroth.
My main problem with the Horde is their selfishness as a faction. Yes yes, I know, fictional and all that but this is a nerdy gaming forum. Anyway, what have the Orcs ever done to try and make good the wrongs they've done? They say "Demons made me do it!" and expect everyone to just forgive them unconditionally, and when they don't get that, the Orcs get violent under some sort of impression their being oppressed. What have the Orcs as a people ever done to try and make good the wrongs they've done? I mean they tried to commit genocide. Twice. And both times nearly succeeded. I'm asking for one deed of selfless kindness to try as a people to set good the wrongs they committed.
Can't think of a single example.
It's like a drunk driver saying "But I was drunk, not my fault!" and I hate that. Especially when you consider, again, that the Orcs willingly fell into line behind the Demons. They actively decided that yes, this is what they want. From what I understand the only Orcs that refused were the Frostwolf clan (Thralls), but they only represent a tiny fraction of a massive population lusting for blood and conflict, to hell with the consequences.
Then when it's over and they've lost they expect sympathy? Forget that. I say kick the Orcs back through the portal to their dying world and slam the door shut behind em. Let em reap what they sewed. They can take the Forsaken with em too. Rest of the Horde factions I figure things could be worked out with, but seriously, screw the Orcs and their Horde.
Here's the thing.Canid117 said:What does Hellscream have again?
Thank you for saying what I'm thinking. What I try to get at with people about the horde is the fact that the actions by those such as the forsaken, or Garrosh, give the whole a bad image. Orcs aren't nearly as bad as people portray them. Argue all you want, but demons WERE the reason the Orcs did what they did. We're talking about magic here, not all of it was willful. People seem to judge them based on their past, which is unfair. They were a different people when Thrall was in charge, and I hope that he takes his place in power back soon.evilthecat said:
The Alliance is not as undiverse as you make it out to be, they accept that Shamanism and druidism exists but let's face it the light it pretty much the right religion, the Naaru being evidence of that. Take my favorite quest in the game where you have to find a way of curing a paladin on the Icecrown Glacier of the plague and you go to the Emerald Dream and Alextraza only for the two to fail until you finally get the help of the Naaru who basically take the paladin to heaven. Eventually the forsaken are going to have to understand that their time is over and should have been killed a long time ago.evilthecat said:In the words of vampire Sam Niell, what's to cure?spectrenihlus said:I agree that the two factions should be working together but the alliance has very legitimate reasons for going to war with the horde. On another point the Forsaken should be working on a cure for their undeath instead of further developing a plague that is irrelevant now that the Lich King is dead.
Above and beyond the fact it seems to be practically impossible (if I remember right there is one, and only one, sentient undead guy in the lore who has ever been restored to life) the Forsaken have also developed their own culture which generally doesn't see their undead state as an impediment. Many Forsaken seem to pretty much regard living humans (and to a lesser extent other living creatures) as little more than vermin, or at least outright inferior. I think other races in the Horde do sometimes think about trying to cure the Forsaken out of compassion, but the Forsaken themselves don't really care. They are what they are, and those who can't accept it kill themselves or revert to mindlessness.
Secondly, the Forsaken are in open war on several fronts. Their cataclysm story sees them fighting what is essentially a total war, in which both sides use magic to 'recruit' the human population of Lordaeron to their side (either by infecting them with the worgen curse, or raising them from the dead as new Forsaken). The Forsaken leadership see themselves (with good reason) as the heirs to the Lordaeron Empire. In their mind, the living creatures who live in Lordaeron are usurpers who refuse to recognize their ancestral rights out of sheer prejudice against the undead, and for the most part they're right. The alliance (culturally monolothic and devoted to a single religion which abhors the undead) would never have accepted a kingdom of zombies as equals. The horde (culturally diverse with a wide range of religious beliefs and interpretations) did.
Finally, the plague. The Forsaken use poisons and diseases as weapons because, being dead, they're immune to most of them. They don't have limitless numbers as they are dependent on either liberating mindless undead from the scourge or using the Val'kyr. Forsaken warfare hinges on bioweapons, which is why they are constantly trying to produce new ones.
A combination of the three factors above means that curing death is not very high on the agenda. Maybe not admirable, but understandable. The forsaken are not idealists, their experiences have largely beaten the idealism out of them as a race. They still have the mentality they earned fighting an unwinnable war for their survival against overwhelming odds, this doesn't leave much time for high idealism and moral reflection.
The Forsaken are not really Horde. Ultimately they are their own faction and many of them don't really care about the living all that much. Heck, there's a cutscene I recently encountered in which Drek'Thar spends several minutes slagging off the Forsaken as inhuman monsters (I'm right here, you know!) I think judging the horde as a whole by the actions of the Forsaken is a bit wrong. If the Horde can be accused of anything, it's not reigning the Forsaken in enough, and it doesn't seem to be for want of trying.
The Forsaken are still my favourite race in World of Warcraft though. I'm a sucker for antiheroes, and essentially they are fighting for the survival. If they hadn't joined the horde and the Alliance races had taken Lordaeron, do you think they would have been shown any mercy? If Gilneas had won the war, would they have taken prisoners? The alliance, fundamentally, don't see the Forsaken as people. The 'crime' of the Forsaken is to return the favour.
Was their guild leader Garithos? Seriously though that dude was a prick.toxbox said:I played on a RP server, so I know exactly what you're talking about.
There was one Alliance guild who only allowed their members to be human, they would talk shit about the other races and blame them for everything bad on the Alliance and wouldn't allow them to take part in raids of Horde cities, nor let them in on pugs. It was really creepy and just wrong.
I'm going by the roleplaying game a bit here, so I'm not sure how canonical some of this is. But the light is not a 'God' religion. It's an ideal and a principle which has meaning in the warcraft universe, and those who invoke it gain power. Even the Naaru are not Gods, they're powerful beings who embody the principles of the light (selflessness, defence of life, healing and so forth).spectrenihlus said:The Alliance is not as undiverse as you make it out to be, they accept that Shamanism and druidism exists but let's face it the light it pretty much the right religion, the Naaru being evidence of that. Take my favorite quest in the game where you have to find a way of curing a paladin on the Icecrown Glacier of the plague and you go to the Emerald Dream and Alextraza only for the two to fail until you finally get the help of the Naaru who basically take the paladin to heaven. Eventually the forsaken are going to have to understand that their time is over and should have been killed a long time ago.
You're really going to pull Godwin's Law on Warcraft? Alright, I can play that game.WaaghPowa said:You say "Orcs" as if they all agreed to do so, if you look back at the history of Draenor, the orcs lived in peaceful shamanistic society.... snippy snippy, don't worry I read it.... you ignore all the work Thrall did to mend the relations between the Alliance and Horde. He was by far the greatest leader of both sides during his time as Warchief. The problem was that the Alliance weren't willing to compromise and a few Orcs who were too hot headed (Garrosh) let their prejudices get in the way of progress.
Neither side is clean.
I'm not sure if he's still around. But there used to be an NPC orc war veteran in Durotar or the Barrens (can't remember which) who would have scripted conversations with a friend. It was a cute little piece of lore and had quite a lot of pathos to it.The Madman said:SNIP
Hm I don't know who the GM was but the guild was called the Covenant I think? It was on The Venture Co. server.spectrenihlus said:Was their guild leader Garithos? Seriously though that dude was a prick.toxbox said:I played on a RP server, so I know exactly what you're talking about.
There was one Alliance guild who only allowed their members to be human, they would talk shit about the other races and blame them for everything bad on the Alliance and wouldn't allow them to take part in raids of Horde cities, nor let them in on pugs. It was really creepy and just wrong.
Ah-HEM. Female Draenei are the prettiest things in the entire game. If I could have played a Draenei and still gone Horde, I would have. But I can't (stupid Blizzard), so I went Alliance. Blood elves are pretty bland, really.Laurie Barnes said:PS. As Yahtzee said they don't even have the hottest girls anymore, in fact your average MALE blood elf is prettier than anything the Alliance has.
The conversation you're thinking about was almost certainly the one in Warsong hold between Garrosh and Saurfang... what? I had a troll character when I played WOW. I might not like the Orcs or Forsaken story-wise, but Trolls, dey be just fine mon. Tauren are pretty nice guys as well, no problem there.evilthecat said:I'm not sure if he's still around. But there used to be an NPC orc war veteran in Durotar or the Barrens (can't remember which) who would have scripted conversations with a friend. It was a cute little piece of lore and had quite a lot of pathos to it.