by Matthew Rossi May 9th 2012 at 12:00PM
The World of Warcraft is an expansive universe. You're playing the game, you're fighting the bosses, you know the how -- but do you know the why? Each week, Matthew Rossi and Anne Stickney make sure you Know Your Lore by covering the history of the story behind World of Warcraft.
Draenor has always interested me.
Note that I didn't say Outland, which is a part of the former world Draenor.
While
Outland itself is very interesting in its own right, one of the things I find fascinating about Draenor is that we do not know what it looked like.
What we do know is that Draenor died when Ner'zhul, the former elder shaman and de facto ruler of the Horde remnants that survived Gul'dan's treachery and Doomhammer's defeat, tried to use stolen magical artifacts to open portals to new worlds, hoping to find one to lead his people to settle on.
While Draenor was the homeworld of the orcish people, who evolved there, it was not named by them.
Rather, it was the draenei fleeing the Burning Legion who gave the world its name.
Draenor means "exile's refuge" in the eredun language.
In turn, these spirits deliberately created a religion among their own descendents that would venerate K'ure's resting place, weaving orc and draenei together spiritually.
Draenor was a world of its own, and we barely knew it. And it's not the only world we know about in the Warcraft cosmos with strange, unexplained mysteries.
cataclysm
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