On Times Square someone recorded some billboards with Warcraft
https://www.instagram.com/p/BFeBoTqCyfp/
On Times Square someone recorded some billboards with Warcraft
https://www.instagram.com/p/BFeBoTqCyfp/
Whom would be the 8 hero orcs?
Orgrim, Durotan, Draka, Old wolfy ridey orc, Gul'dan, Blackhand, Grom (?), ?? Thrall?
Humour in the all last clips looks really well placed and not cringeworhty. Its already better than all humour LotR had (just remember it was consisted of stupid Gimli fart jokes and hobbit weed smoking).
"Just because the faces were locked in by the performances of the actors, though, doesn’t mean anything else was. The team used the concept art of Wei Wang from Blizzard to figure out how to bring the characters from the video game into the real world. Then it was about making every single one of them unique. Outside of the eight hero orcs, 52 different orc types were created, and using a huge cache of different tattoos, armors, hairstyles, and looks, they were able to turn those 52 into hundreds and thousands of different variants."
I know Thrall is a baby but who else is there?
I love when Kazinsky corrects her. They're both right, in a way. Thrall is found in the forest, but he wasn't sent down a river.
It's not a huge change, which is why I guess Rob felt the need to say it wasn't a change at all.
When you can discuss the lore with one of the actors, that's when you know the movie is in good hands.
Durotan, Orgrim, Gul'dan, Blackhand, Grommash, Draka, Kargath (he's seen, not named) and the old guy, who could be Drek'thar.
Those are unique, so I guess those are the "heroes".
Last edited by Soulwind; 2016-05-16 at 07:53 PM.
So tired of IGN's bullshit. But whatever. http://www.ign.com/articles/2016/05/...stic-creatures
Point is that if circumstances point you in a certain direction, you're going to act in a certain way. Because it's not about what is justified or not, is about what you need to do. This game is clearly meant to come up with excuses to maintain a degree of strife between the factions. And I can't seriously sympathize with the Night Elves either when they acted like angry amazons in the first place by approaching the orcs with a "shoot first, ask later" mindset, which is what sparkled the never-ending animosity between Night Elves and Warsong Orcs.
Daelin wasn't some lone madman though. There are warmongers among the Alliance aswell, acknowledged by the lore. Varian shared the same exact opinion not long ago, and he leads the whole damn Alliance. Admiral Rogers would cook orc babies if she would find them tasty and she basically led the whole Pandaria expedition.And he was killed for it. By Thrall the Pacifist, no less. I'd say that pretty much everyone who hates the Horde to that degree, who is of any significance, has been killed.
I loved even more when he corrected "Jesus" with "Moses". I was really glad. Thrall is Moses through and through, "Green Jesus" is just silly.
About that interview, Daniel got me a little salty, Gul'dan wants power that's it, I don't think he ever wanted "whats best for his people" and he never thought he was doing the best for his people, he was a selfish twat to craved power more than anything else.
World of Warcraft: Shadowblands
Diablo Bore.
People always gets salty about his statements but after playing and reading stuff about WoD I'm inclined to agree. Gul'dan is still a megalomaniac sociopath who doesn't care about anyone apart himself, but in a way he genuinely believes that jump on the Legion's wagon is the best thing to do, it's just that the orcs don't want to become puppets and Gul'dan never asked their permission to begin with, because he doesn't care. He treats everyone disagreeing with him as a clueless moron "lacking vision". He even says that to Grom in the 6.2 cinematic.
Gul'dan is also a liar, you know. Him describing his character as just a dude who wants power sounds a a lot more boring than someone who is purely using the Orcs to get what he wants, which is a spoiler.
He's the Kil'jaeden of the orcs, really. It's just that the orcs didn't have as much to offer as the Eredar. I'm sure Kil'jaeden promised much more than he delivered.
Once in Azeroth, though, he does become more selfish. He betrays the Horde and the Legion and tries to get the power in the Tomb of Sargeras for himself, which is his demise. If they wanted to give it a spin, they could say Kil'jaeden lied to him and betrayed the Horde first, so he was going to get that power to turn the Horde against the Burning Legion. He would most definitely still be a villain, but he would be a much more reasonable character.
I still don't know what he's trying to do in Legion, he feels more like a cartoon villain in there. He has no Horde, so he's... leading a bunch of elves who haven't been able to do anything relevant in thousands of years? He resurrects Illidan only for him to turn against Gul'dan? I feel almost sorry for the guy, he's trying too hard to be a threat to us and failing miserably.
Last edited by Soulwind; 2016-05-16 at 08:42 PM.
I guess all in all we can say that... Gul'dan is a mystery. Nobody really knows what his plan is and why he is doing it. I mean someone can say its for the good of the orcs, but some may say he is just using them... none seem to have a real answer :U