With the Battle for Azeroth expansion rapidly approaching in Blizzard’s World of Warcraft, I’ve been working on tying up some loose ends on my Dwarf Paladin.
Most of the quest chains I had already finished prior to the incident with Sargeras’ sword, but there were a few random things left to be done.
I am the walrus.
Time to face Gul’dan in the Nighthold.
With Gul’dan’s defeat (and the Suramar questline sufficiently advanced), I can finally collect the Eye of Aman’thul.
With the Legionfall questline completed, I could finally search out my class mount.
Glowing Reins of the Golden Charger.
Now it’s off to Highmountain to do World Quests for the reputation to unlock the tribe as an Allied Race.
Meanwhile…. It’s over 9,000,000,000,000,000!
Realistically, I am not going to get the reputation for three of the four Allied Races that are available now. I’m well over exalted with the Nightborne, but it’s Highmountain for the Tauren and Argussian Reach for the Void Elves I need to be working on. But that’s okay. My current plan with World of Warcraft is to keep my focus on the Alliance and to keep up with the Battle for Azeroth content as it releases so I’m not playing catch up with this expansion.
I’ve also begun dabbling with streaming again, this time on Facebook’s new gaming service. While I did a couple World of Warcraft broadcasts, I mostly plan to focus on Nintendo Switch games there beginning with tomorrow’s rerelease of Captain Toad: Treasure Tracker. Please follow my Cablepunk Facebook Page to keep up with that adventure!
Sargeras has been imprisoned by the Pantheon, the Burning Crusade is at long last over, but Azeroth bleeds….
At the completion of Antorus, the Burning Throne, the final Legion raid in World of Warcraft, Sargeras plunges his sword into Azeroth at Silithus. While I was never familiar with the zone prior, I am familiar with Feralas, the zone just north of it, as that’s where each February the Hatching of the Hippogryphs occurs. So it was from there that I took flight on my gryphon mount and got my first glimpse of the sword.
The Sword of Sargeras as seen from Feralas.
There was a brief quest chain to to be done in Silithus concerning the newly-encountered material azerite, the crystallized blood of the planet Azeroth.
The Sword of Sargeras as seen from Staghelm Point. Time to go kill some goblins mining azerite!
Eventually, Khadagar and Magni Bronzebeard showed up expressing concern about how this new resource of azerite is creating new tensions between the Alliance and the Horde, and how the planet is suffering due to this wicked splinter. So, of course, we’re getting the setup here for Battle for Azeroth.
This diamond dude gets around.
Khadgar and Magni get the crazy idea that our artifact weapons — which we aquired in Legion and have spent countless hours upgrading — can be used to siphon off the dark energies from the corrupted sword. So we do that.
For Azeroth!
And while we manage to stop Azeroth’s suffering a little, I’m pretty sure we’re going to need a whole expansion to solve this one.
Ashbringer has just absorbed a bunch of dark energy from Sargeras’s sword. A clever way to render the weapon useless for the Battle for Azeroth expansion. But, c’mon, I put a lot of work into this weapon!
I first started playing World of Warcraft with Mists of Pandaria, but it wasn’t until Legion that I finally got hooked on the game and its lore. I had my doubts about Battle for Azeroth, but I think Blizzard came up with a clever way to drain Legion’s artifact weapons of their power. Like, they’re already the most powerful weapons on the planet, and, additionally, I put a lot of work into leveling up Ashbringer over the past year, so there’s no way some island green is going to be more powerful than it — not unless, of course, the weapon was somehow damaged. So I’m pleased the writers worked something out that makes sense lore-wise.
I have a lot of loose ends to wrap up with Legion before Battle for Azeroth drops, so back to the reputation grind!