"The high elven priests use their Light-given powers to heal the wounded and bolster the spirits of Lordaeron's fighting elite." - The Warcraft III Manual entry for the Elven Priest.
Not Arcane-Given. Not Sunwell-Given. Light given.
Furthermore the lore for Blood Knights is that they are a mixture of former priests and royal guards who had lost faith in the light and decided to control it instead of light powers being granted to them through faith. Liadrin was a devout follower of the light. Light worship is a part of High Elven history according to lore. Now, now, I know that it's lore that was written for TBC so I'm sure you'll want to dismiss it as giving a background with the light to a race race that did not have it. To that I say fair enough.
But now here's the kicker : the World of Warcraft RPG makes several mentions of the fact that light worship was part of high elven society. Aha! "But girl, the RPGs are not considered canon!" You are ab-so-lu-tely right disembodied voice in my head, the RPG books are not considered canon today. But do you know when they were considered canon lore sources and featured as such on the official world of warcraft website? Back before TBC.
So there ya go. Whether you want to go by current or outdated canon it's considered that wielding and worshiping the light is part of High Elven culture since at the very least the third war. Which, once again, does not invalidate all of the points you have made previously. I'm just kind of a c*nt when it comes to lore points.
They had light priests but I would not call them exceedingly religious. Their faith in Elune, their ancestral deity, has been forsaken. Why would they care about some foreign religion if they don't care to maintain their own? I would call Liadrin and her followers a minority.
i dont know if has been asked before, and sorry if its a silly question, but why is it that in most stuff i read, high elves are portrayed with Blood Elves bodytype instead of Night Elves?
Arent High Elves the ones that stood near the well of eternity 'aka' azjara's minions/followers?
edit: nvm i have mistaken high elves with Highborne.
Last edited by fathom81; 2019-01-18 at 07:31 PM.
You are right, but there are some hints that there were, aside of light worshippers, some Arcane Powered Holy Priests.
There were also some "arcane priests" in Suramar, who used moon magic to deal damage and heal themselves, so we can assume that arcane can provide ways to look like a priest. If nightborne can, they may be some among blood elves. However, we don't know if playable Nightborne are arcane priests or rather an oversight.Blood elves follow, or at least did when they were high elves, the Holy Light just like humans and dwarves. Unlike the two others however, who derive their power from faith alone, high elf and blood elf priests seem to derive theirs from other sources. The first of these was the Sunwell, brought to end by the Scourge during the Third War when it was used to resurrect the Kel'thuzad.
"They will sire" "They will turn"A dying group fading away hanging onto an adjective does not change this. Nor does that adjective give them the right to exclude Blood Elves from the definition. The travel of direction for the Alliance High Elves is clear. They will sire Half Elves, or turn into Void Elves. All the while their numbers will keep falling until they completely assimilate with human culture.
Once again, you're confusing your own wishes wih facts.
The last half elf ever introduced in Warcraft is Arator. That was back in 2007. Yet 12 years later you seem to see half-elves everywhere whereas there are only 3 or 4 half-elves recorded.They will sire Half Elves
You don't "turn" void elf. Void elves are blood elves who were born from an unfinished and unexpected transformation. Stop saying bs.or turn into Void Elves
In BFA, more High elves were introduced in Stormwind, Stromgarde, Telogrus Rift and Boralus. But their number will keep failing that's right.All the while their numbers will keep falling until they completely assimilate with human culture.
The irony.
Last edited by elbleuet; 2019-01-18 at 10:05 PM.
No one's been saying the high elf race isn't playable either. They're talking about playable Alliance High Elves. If you can't tell the difference then go through this entire thread as that difference has been stated over and over.
Get your head out of wherever it is stuck and learn that the request is about a group of elves on Alliance being asked to be made playable. Sorry that just cuz High Elf is used it's causing you confusion. That's Blizzard's fault for naming a group of Alliance Elves "High Elves" who are also of the race "high elf".
It'd be like if they called Stormwind Humans just human. So you play Human of Human race. Just like a Zandalari is a Troll but call themselves Zandalari, or how Darkspear are Trolls but call themselves Darkspear.
Maybe, I dunno.
I don't really think they're the same species because then you'd need to make the case that Forsaken and Humans are the same thing, when it seems pretty silly to me to suggest that.
But that's your call man.
Also thinking of Void Elves as celestial abominations is genuinely the only way I find them interesting. You're a horror beyond space and time! That's way more interesting than "blue elf with tentacles".
I'd probably say the Eredar are a distinct species from the Draenei, yeah. They're distinct on an elemental level. Anything that has a different elemental alignment is probably a distinct species.
I dunno about Worgen. Honestly it only really seems relevant for furry RP and that's gross. don't @ me furries
Probably. I dunno if they'll even be able to have kids. Maybe they reproduce via binary fission, like Voidwalkers do?
I don't know if I'd say they're a different species, depends on whether they can interbreed. I don't think they wouldn't be able to, so they're probably the same species.
I don't think I'd call them a nature abomination; they have to actually be abominable to be an abomination.
You aren't really treating it much like a request when you're arguing so much about it.
I don't even hate the idea. I think it might work if it's done really well. I just haven't seen the case where it's done really well.
If you are particularly bold, you could use a Shiny Ditto. Do keep in mind though, this will infuriate your opponents due to Ditto's beauty. Please do not use Shiny Ditto. You have been warned.
DING DING DING! We have a winner.
Just whiners complaining that the Alliance doesn't have everything. Note that the Horde doesn't have any dwarves to play? Yeah.
Want to play a High Elf? Make a High Elf, which is available to the Horde faction.
(And seeing as how the Alliance got Dark Iron Dwarves, which makes no fucking sense, if they do add "High Elves" [ie, with blue eyes], they damn well better be a Horde allied race just out of spite of that idiotic decision on their part.)
Do you have any Horde Dwarf NPCs? What are you on about?
"Alliance got Dark Iron Dwarves, which makes no fucking sense" <-- ???? Did you play Cataclysm? Where a sect of Dark Irons led by Moira came back along with the renewed Council of Three Hammers?
Now I see what makes you type in your posts. You have an ignorant view of what's developed in-game.
I guess this is an example of being ignorant somehow giving a free pass to spout some BS.
Aww, whassamatta wittle guy?
So upset that you can't acknowledge that there are playable High Elves, but they're just on a different faction from the one you want them to be on? I'm so sorry! I can see that clearly hurts your fee-fees.
But hey. The option is still there. Wanna play a High Elf? You can!
Unfortunately for you, they're Horde. No matter how much you want to whine, stomp, and cry over it.
Sorry, but if you think Draenei are a different species from Eredar then saying "Blood Elves are High Elves" wouldn't be correct either.
https://wow.gamepedia.com/DraeneiThe draenei [ˈdɹænɑɪ] (meaning Exiled Ones in their own tongue) are a faction of uncorrupted eredar who fled their homeworld of Argus to escape the corruption of the demonic Burning Legion.
"Draenei" is just a different term, that describes their faction. Their race is still Eredar. Just like how Blood Elves are a faction, but their race is still High Elf.
Except what people ask for are the faction that call themselves High Elves, who are of the race High Elf.
Also Worgen are considered still of the Human race.
https://wow.gamepedia.com/WorgenWorgen are not technically a race and thus cannot reproduce like one. The worgen curse is just a curse. Its origins are rooted in the druidic pack form that was later altered by the Scythe of Elune. The end result is worgen we see today, beings that can transmit their affliction to others via a single bite. In theory, if two worgen were to mate and produce an offspring, that offspring would not be a worgen. The child would merely possess the genetic material of his or her parents, like any other child sans the curse.[17]
This is why I asked about Void Elf reproduction, if the babies pop out Void Elves then it determines a different species.
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Ignorance must be bliss for you.
What ignorance?
You're the one who wants to play a High Elf, which is a race. And that race is available to the Horde, under the faction of the Blood Elves.
Or what, are Steamwheedle Goblins not Goblins now?
Quit being a spoiled, snot-nosed brat. If you want to play a High Elf, go play one. They've been in the game for over a decade.
And trolls exist already too, no need for Zandalari. Mag'har shouldn't be in because there's already Orcs. Let's get rid of Dark Iron, Void Elves, Highmountain, Lightforged, and Kul'Tiran too because their respective races are already available.
Your "argument" sounds like one against the Allied Race system itself rather than specifically High Elves.
You still can't produce evidence of a Horde Dwarf NPC either.
Didn't say there were.
You know what else there isn't? Alliance Trolls. Or Horde Dwarves. But you know what there are? Horde Trolls. And Alliance Dwarves. Just like there's Horde High Elves.
You want to play a High Elf? Again, they've been available for over a decade. Knock yourself out.
https://www.wowhead.com/news=283929/...an-allied-race
Here's the entire Q&A where Ion said, "If you want to play a light-skinned, Thalassian Elf, the Horde is there for you." You're saying he brought up the neutrality of Pandaren in this same Q&A. I don't recall him ever bringing up Pandaren in this Q&A, but there it is if you want to find the timestamp for us and let us know which part in there he brings up Pandaren neutrality as it relates to High Elves.
You cant compare zandalari/regular troll with high elf/blood elf.
You can clearly see the difference between the two which is what the AR system is based on. On the other hand the two elves have 0 differences besides eye glow which could be made = and justified by the sunwell now.
As for kt humans, we haven't interacted with them since ever so Blizzard had more room to give them new bodies and models and simultaneously come up with lore reasons.
With high elves, we've been interacting with them in wow since TBC with them always sharing the exact same model as belves. Why would they out of no where have different body structure than belves. If anything it makes sense to have them look the same as both factions have been having a "cold war" over silvermoon since the silver covenant was formed.
Here's the direct link to the question where High Elves are asked in that Q&A: https://www.twitch.tv/videos/254739285?t=01h01m24s
In this, he doesn't reference anything to the Pandaren at all that I can see. He instead mentions giving the High Elves to the Alliance as possibly blurring the lines between the two factions, then goes on to discuss what a High Elf actually is in his mind. Nothing in that talks about the Pandaren nor their neutrality as a mistake, nor anything that Blizzard would look to avoid in the future.
Was it during another question that I missed somehow?
We've had kul'tirans in-game since Vanilla so we have interacted with them, it wasn't until Blizzard decided to give them a new look that they got one even so far as Legion they had Kul'Tirans on Broken Isles with the same Human model. Then Blizzard decided the next expansion when they'll make Kul'Tirans playable and gave them new models and an explanation for it.
Same for high elves and blood elves who used different thalassian models before they got their current ones, in Vanilla not TBC. They used some old elf model. High Elves in particular had used a variant of the Night Elf model for some of their NPCs.
Plus that poster was referring to races so I'm simply referring to races as well. It should all make sense because apparently we're all talking about races.