Retro Review: Warcraft: Of Blood and Honor

Retro Review: Of Blood and Honor:

“Of Blood and Honor” is a novella included in in the “Warcraft Archive,” which was one of my prizes from the Global Writing Contest. (It’s also available as an ebook, if you’re into that sort of thing.) It’s an interesting insight into the background of some of Warcraft’s more memorable characters, and also an insight into the man behind Warcraft’s lore.

Cover art for Warcraft: Of Blood and HonorIt brings us back to the time before the Third War — or Warcraft III, in real world terms — and focuses on Tirion Fordring, now famous for being the guy who shattered Frostmourne. While hunting, Tirion encounters a fugitive Orc squatting on his land. Naturally, they fight, each finding the other to be a worthy foe.

Without giving too much away, some bad luck leaves Tirion indebted to the Orc, despite their violent meeting. He finds the Orc is far from the savage fiend he thought all Orcs to be.

He swears to protect the Orc from from the rest of the Alliance, but this puts him in direct conflict with his fellow Knights of the Silver Hand. Lordaeron’s policy is to execute all free Orcs, and the rise of a new warchief by the name of Thrall has brought their paranoia to a new peak.

The interesting thing about “Of Blood and Honor” is that it is, to the best of my knowledge, the only piece of Warcraft lore written directly by Chris Metzen, the chief brains behind all of Blizzard’s worlds and storylines. I was very curious to see what his writing was like.

The answer is: inconsistent. His prose is fairly crude, and he’s entirely too fond of adjectives and adverbs. Although to be fair, he’s no worse than Richard Knaak in this regard. His perspective is also sloppy, and while some of the characters in “Of Blood and Honor” are well-crafted, others feel very thin.

On the other hand, his writing does embody a lot of the passion and badassery that defines the Warcraft universe. This is clearly a man who enjoys his work.

Tirion helps the Orc Eitrigg in Warcraft: Of Blood and HonorI also loved the morality play aspect of the story. It harkened back to the slightly deeper, Warcraft III style of storytelling, and it was surprisingly intelligent for a Warcraft story. I especially liked how there was no clear right answer. Where does Tirion’s loyalty lie? With his nation, with his family, or with what he knows to be right in his heart? Which is the right one to stay faithful to?

I can’t answer that. I doubt anyone really can.

On a more personal note, I enjoyed going back to the earlier days of the Warcraft universe, when things were a bit simpler. Not that I dislike how things have evolved, but sometimes, I yearn for the days when it was just about Orcs and humans, before all the underground tentacle monsters, sparkly angelic squidgoatKlingons from OOOUUUTTEEER SPAAAAACE, samophlanges, and the thirty kazillion Dragonflights.

Overall rating: 7.5/10 A very mixed bag of a story, but worth it.

To the Finalist Go the Spoils

You may remember that, several months ago, I placed as a finalist in Blizzard’s 2011 Global Writing Contest. I earned recognition and a small amount of literary glory, but I also earned lootz.

And now, after many months of hardship and delays on both their end and mine, I have finally received my prizes: five “archive” anthologies, each containing multiple novels from all three major Blizzard franchises. Each is autographed by Chris Metzen, the CDev publishing team, and their respective cover artists.

My prize books from the 2011 Blizzard Writing ContestDespite my rapid need to consume all Blizzard lore, there are actually a few books in these I haven’t read. This is because they were only made available via the archives (or as ebooks, which I am not really a fan of), and I didn’t want to buy the whole anthology for one new story.

And, of course, the Diablo stuff is all new to me, since I had no interest in Diablo up until recently.

Expect a lot of retro reviews in the coming weeks.

But as nice as these books are, it really pales in comparison to the simple fact of Blizzard giving their approval to some of my work. As I said before, having been a Blizzard fan for so long, this is a great thrill.

Metzen's autograph!Hopefully getting the prizes sorted out means they’ll do the official post with the winning story and excerpts from the finalists soon, and I’ll be able to milk the last few drops out of my fifteen minutes of fame.

Looking to the future:

I don’t know if Blizzard will hold another contest this year, as there have been some shake-ups in their lore department, but you can bet I’ll enter it if I do.

I’m already thinking of new potential stories. I had a strategy last time: pick a topical issue relevant to the current expansion and popular among fans. It seemed to work for me, so I’ll do the same thing again next time (if there is a next time). Perhaps something on Garrosh…