![]() ![]() Of course, we’ll have to learn more on how Turalyon and Alleria’s story pans out to draw better theorycraft. If Turalyon and his people learned the way of traveling through time and space, it’s likely possible that somehow one of these humans might have been stranded or captured in the past of Draenor - where then Garona could make sense to be half-human before the orcs created the Dark Portal.Ĭertainly a paradox, but alternate timelines are canon in the lore. I assume some of their followers were with them when they were lost in time, so it is possible that the human, high elven and human/high elven hybrid races may have flourished elsewhere in time in other worlds. Turalyon and Alleria have been lost for about 30 years in Warcraft time, but they have lived a thousand years. World of Warcraft: Legion gives us another creative story that further opens our mind to alternate timelines and alternate realities. In that novel, it was revealed that Nozdormu is in contact with other alternate Nozdormus from alternate Azeroths. In World of Warcraft: The Shattering, we also got to see a world where Blackmoor was triumphant, and very likely Rhonin and Krasus changed the past slightly in War of the Ancients creating an alternate timeline. Kairoz picked an alternate timeline where Garrosh was never born as their destination. An example is Warlords of Draenor, which came to exist when Garrosh and Kairoz altered the past but that was already an alternate reality before Garrosh arrived there. We know there are other alternate timeline/realities. Creatively, that could have worked but it would be creepy considering Me’dan is the offspring of Medivh and Garona.Īnother thing that could creatively work would require a paradox in time where the first time the Horde crossed over to Azeroth Garona didn’t exist. Theoretically, it could have been explained if Sargeras-Medivh somehow had used magic to teleport to Draenor long before the Dark Portal was created, and had shed some of his blood in a ritual with Gul’dan to magically create a orc/human hybrid that Gul’dan could use later as a decoy to secure the downfall of Stormwind. The timeline and common-sense however dictated that fact couldn’t be possible. Just think about how you present it.Originally, the Warcraft: Orcs and Humans Game Manual back in 1994 stated that Garona was half-orc and half-human. And its like “oooh, so they were Draenei and Orc, but they were actually into each other, I’m not getting told some smut horror fetish” They loved each other, it was mutual, but the difference of race always lay between them” Immediately is less SNIP - GM. I’d say if you went with the idea, think really carefully about how you would explain it to someone in character… Saying “My Father was an Orc and my Mother was a Draenei” instantly could make some people think “I don’t want to carry on having this conversation, I do not like where it is going!” Whereas saying “Many did not approve of my parents. Lots of people don’t want to talk about Sexual assaults, especially not in -games- and unfortunately an Orc/Draenei pairing does imply that. Most people who meet you will make assumptions, unpleasant assumptions, about what crime your mother was subjected to, so if that is something you are not comfortable reacting to then I would honestly steer clear of it.Įssentially it would have to crop up eventually, and the thing is, even if -you- are comfortable with it, you have no idea if the other person is. Not impossible, but rare as rocking horse poop. We don’t hear of any, but if it is biologically possible, then it does not mean it was always a result of atrocity. As a few have pointed out, the way in which such parings worked was not usually something you should be exploring in a game, especially one with children playing it.Īs Shadowtwill says however, that does not mean that there were no consensual pairings. ![]()
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