Children of the Gods Soundtrack, Part Two

We now come to the second installment of my soundtrack for Children of the Gods. These songs will take us on a rollercoaster ride of hope and despair, covering events up to and including chapter fourteen, “The Promise.”

There will be spoilers. I’m trying to keep them vague, but there’s only so much I can do.

5: The Predator:

“The greatest tragedy of war is that it debases all it touches.”

As the war progresses, Leha finds herself slipping into the darkest aspects of her personality. She becomes a predator consumed by the need to slaughter all who stand in her way. To accompany her fall into this dark persona, I’ve chosen the intro music for Myth II’s “Landing at Whitefalls” mission. Grim and menacing, it captures Leha’s methodical brutality.

6: Redemption:

In humanity’s darkest hour, there comes one single source of hope. A man who could offer a chance of redemption not only for the monsters created by the Arcanids, but for the rest of humankind, as well.

I chose the Elwynn Forest soundtrack from World of Warcraft: Cataclysm as Zuruk’s theme. It’s a tranquil song that gives one the feeling there’s always hope for a better tomorrow, even in the darkest times.

7: Humanity Falls Silent:

But just as there seems to hope after all, disaster strikes. With one terrible miscalculation, the human cause is crushed, and the Arcanids stand triumphant.

Though it’s used for what is theoretically a happy scene, I’ve always found An End Once and for All from the Mass Effect 3 soundtrack to be an incredibly tragic-sounding piece, so it’s my choice for the moment when all of humanity falls silent.

8: The Promise:

All is lost. It’s all over. Humanity has fallen.

Only a handful remain free, Leha among them. She wishes to end her life, and the pain with it. But she cannot shirk her duty. And so she and her few remaining companions make one promise, one pledge to press on for the human cause no matter how hopeless it seems.

My choice of song for this moment is the intro music for “Gate of Storms” from Myth II. It’s a bleak and morose song, but there’s the subtle hint of hope at the end. The battle is lost, but the war goes on.

* * *

Stay tuned for the final installment of the Children of the Gods sountrack, featuring a number of songs from World of Warcraft and a bonus track all the way from Iceland.

Diablo III: Reaper of Souls, and What It Means for WoW

The plot thickens:

So yesterday we learned that Blizzard had trademarked “The Dark Below.” The big question was whether this was the next World of Warcraft expansion, or the next Diablo expansion.

And now Blizzard has launched a site for Diablo III: Reaper of Souls.

Review: Diablo: The Book of CainThe odds of this being anything but the expansion pack for D3 (which will probably be annnounced at Gamescom in a few days) are slim to none.

So that can only mean one thing.

[UPDATE: Okay, it’s getting weirder. MMO-Champion is now reporting that Blizzard has trademarked “Corgis Unleashed.” This somewhat throws into question whether “The Dark Below” is legit or not. Someone is obviously trolling us. The question is whether Blizzard is intentionally trying to throw us off the scent (they’ve done similar things in the past), or whether this is all just some douche’s idea of a joke.

I’m still inclined to think The Dark Below is real. The timing is right, and it sounds like a WoW expansion. But maybe it’s wishful thinking on my part.

On with the original post.]

World of Warcraft: The Dark Below

I think this is all but confirmed now. The timing is right for this to be the next WoW expansion. It’s not a Diablo expansion. It’s not a StarCraft expansion. It’s almost certainly not related to Titan considering that just got reset.

So what could the Dark Below refer to? Despite all the hints of a Legion expansion being next, my money is on Azshara.

Let’s put on our tinfoil hats here. Ozumat is the Fiend of the Dark Below. There have been hints that something really nasty is happening in Azeroth’s seas from as far as back as Warcraft III. There have been repeated mentions of N’zoth, the Drowned God, in both Cataclysm and Mists of Pandaria. We never did find out what happened to Neptulon, and if Azshara succeeded in corrupting him, she would now have complete control over the element of water. Sounds like an expansion-level threat to me.

Art of Queen Azshara from the Warcraft trading card gameAlso, Blizzard said that Mists of Pandaria was sort of a late addition. They originally had a different plan for expansion five fully planned out, then decided to put it off in favour of PandaLand. Cataclysm had a lot of Naga involvement and hints of Azshara, as if they were planning that as the next big threat…

An Azshara expansion is something I’m whole-heartedly in favour of. Azshara is one of the last major villains from pre-WoW lore we haven’t tangled with yet. She’s one of the most unabashedly evil characters in Azeroth’s history, and she was a mage of near godlike power before the Old Gods turned into her into an immortal Lovecraftian monster and before she conquered the elemental plane of water.

She’s also a female villain, which is something WoW doesn’t have a lot of. And this could be a great opportunity to bring Tyrande back into the spotlight, as she’s probably Azshara’s most iconic rival.

And the Great Sea includes all kinds of interesting places, like Zandalar, the Rift of Aln, Kul Tiras, and the Tomb of friggin’ Sargeras.

Of course, it could also be an underground expansion focused on the dark places within Azeroth. Which could also be very cool. Azjol-Nerub, anyone? Or it could even combine elements of both.

Concept art of the cancelled Azjol-Nerub zone from World of WarcraftI’m trying not to get too excited. Expectation is almost always better than reality.

And then there’s the other news:

And we mustn’t forget that this is big news on the Diablo front, as well.

Surprisingly, I am quite excited about a D3 expansion. Although I’ve not always been the biggest Diablo fan, I did quite enjoy D3 — despite its many notable flaws — and I’m very eager to see the next installment of the story.

It’s hard to speculate based just on this vague title, but the website quotes a line from the Prophecy of the End Days that most people assume to refer to Malthael, the missing archangel of wisdom.

I’ve said before that I want a D3 expansion with the angels as the main villains, so that would definitely get my seal of approval.

Mostly, I’m just excited to return to slaying demons with Kormac, Eirena, and Shen. Love the characters in that game.

My wizard in the Diablo III open beta* * *

So, what say you about this news? Does the Dark Below tickle your fancy as a WoW expansion? What do you think it might be about? And what are your thoughts on Reaper of Souls as the Diablo expansion?