I mean there is this thing with Shivarra and Sayaad being so... horny. There's already this connection of fel with Lust, has always been framed in this "sinful" way, but it would be very interesting to see how these races were before being conscripted into the Burning Legion.
I think there's a lot of potential on Fel itself, not as a consuming force, but the Emerald Flame that burns out the stagnant, the spark of endless change and entropy (kinda like the Phoenix Force in Marvel Comics TBH)
It should also be noted that while Khaz'goroth's handiwork is the Dwarves.. there's also Aggramar who's handiwork is the Grond from Draenor, which would slowly evolve later to Gronn, Ogres, and eventually Orcs.
Then again, this could also be Titan Propaganda since this information came from the Chronicles.
I mean, workwork's discovery sounds cool, but ya'll realize he can just as easily be a megafan feigning ignorance of these things to make it sound more legitimate, right?
"Hmm...I saw...a glowing sphere kinda? Seemed to be surrounded by rocks. Does anyone know if it would be something underground, perhaps some kind of...planet core?
There was a short person...like some kind of...halfling or other short person...wearing...what looked like some kind of metal suit? He was surrounded by some kind of cogs and maybe rockets? Does anyone know anything like that in WoW, I am totally ignorant of any of this despite being on MMO-C."
It's like a cold-reading psychic.
Isn't the whole Dominatrix Shivarra/Sayaad thing being actually heavily sexual/lusty very very headcanon-y in WoW, like the shit RPers come up with when the horny gets the better of them? They don't actually fuck, they just look alluring to bait you in and tear you to pieces, no? Unless we're talking about the PoV of their victims, in which case.. I suppose it plays a role to some extent.
Rise of the Horde says they slake their lust through coupling, while other demons did so through violence.
So the implication is, yes, they are sexual/lusty.
I think there is an archeology item that also says they write about their day to day lurid activities on journals made from human skin.
So for Titans as the patrons of races, we have:
Aman'thul -> Odyn -> Vrykul -> Humans
Aman'thul -> Ra -> Mogu
Aman'thul -> Nozdormu -> Bronze Dragons
Norgannon -> Mimiron -> Gnomes
Norgannon -> Malygos -> Blue dragons
Eonar -> Freya -> The Emerald Dream creatures (Wild Gods, dryads, centaur, trolls and elves)
Eonar -> Alexstraza & Ysera -> Red & Green dragons
Golganneth -> Hodir -> Giants
Khaz'goroth -> Archaedas -> Earthen -> Dwarves
Khaz'goroth -> Neltharion -> Black Dragons
Aggramar -> Tyr -> indirectly Vrykul and Humans
Aggramar -> Grond -> Orcs and Ogres
Sargeras -> Demons
Argus -> Draenei
Based on this, we haven't seen much of Golganneth's legacy. We saw his tidestone a few times but not much about how he or his servants shaped the sea and sky.
The original harpy lore was that they reproduced by kidnapping males of various races and forcibly mating.
Also, this is a page from the 2005 book The Art of World of Warcraft. https://archive.org/details/the-art-...craft_p011.jpg
I am keeping it vague for the simple reason that I didn't see well enough. i don't wanna say "oh it was definitely xal'atath, holding the trinket from the new dungeon, 110% believe me guys, believe me." i saw it for 4 seconds total, from a bad angle. it was an elf, with a look that wasn't easy to identify, if it is xal'atath she has a new model. and she held a sphere in her hands with a lot of purple and some vaguely gold/yellow on it. i made the assumption that it was xal'atath due to my knowledge of playing the game.
if i see that banner hanging up tomorrow i can come back and describe it with 5000 words, if you'd like. i play wow, i love wow, i have built blizzcon sets previous years aswell, i browse this forum on occation but not as much as i used to. i'm not oblivious to the stuff i see, but i don't wanna sound like i am certain when i'm not.
Golganneth is supposedly the lord of the skies and oceans. He gave Hodir his ice powers while he gave Thorim dominion over lightning. Both of which use their power to hold control over the skies and weather.
In the RPG, Creator of the seas and skies, Golganneth is the father of Azeroth's sea giants and loves flying and swimming creatures above all else.
Got it. Nothing personal, just the same skepticism we'd use for anything.
If those 4 screenshots are fake, I'll be happy to be wrong. Not that they disqualify a Void expansion with Xal'atath as a main/secondary antagonist.
EDIT: Oh no, new dual-leaker fights with throwaways.