He found by a human when he was a baby, so he can't be any more than Garrosh was born on Draenor prior to the orcs drinking the demon blood, so he's older than It's a little strange maybe because the relationship between the two generally has Thrall in the mentor role and Garrosh as the student, but sometimes younger people can teach older people. Posts look awkward without a signature underneath. Tloya posted I think Thrall is around 35 now.
It is also possible that Garrosh was born as Grom entered the dark portal which would make their age difference nominal. More topics from this board What expansion was the downfall? And quit this sad game? What was the.. How do I get Pet's Hunter? Build 4 Answers How and where do you learn to use guns? Side Quest 9 Answers What is the quickest way? Main Quest 6 Answers Why can't I loot anything? General 7 Answers How do I speak in the general chat? General 1 Answer.
Ask A Question. Browse More Questions. Some time afterwards, Garrosh greeted new pandaren who have sworn allegiance to the Horde along with Ji Firepaw. He instructed them of what he expects of them [44] and tested their martial prowess by unleashing his captured beasts on them in the Ring of Valor.
Garrosh Hellscream, landing with the Dominance Offensive. Roughly two months after the initial foray into Pandaria , Garrosh himself arrived with the bulk of the Horde fleet, [45] and quickly went about removing the local Alliance presence along the shore of Krasarang.
Members of his own Horde joined forces with former Warchief Thrall to liberate the isle and take down Garrosh's men. As a deterrent, Thrall himself took up the leadership of the isles in Vol'jin's absence. Horde heroes were instructed to report Vol'jin's death to Garrosh, and remained close to the warchief — biding their time and finding other like-minded members of the Horde to save their coalition before Garrosh's rule destroys it.
He learned from Malkorok about the mogu race and took a special interest in the iron-fisted rule of the mogu and their technology remarking to Malkorok that he had much to learn from them , being particularly attracted by their ability to create new warriors and fuel emotions to their height in order to drastically increase battle prowess. Garrosh had sent an expedition led by Fanlyr Silverthorn to Ancestral Rise and wanted to see results. He was pleased when Fanlyr revealed to him information about the [ Divine Bell ].
Some time later, Garrosh traveled to Fire Camp Bataar , which he turned into a horde camp, and was investigating any mentions about the bell with Delia Sunseeker. It was there that Agent Connelly and an Alliance adventurer spied on him and learned about the Divine Bell too. Theron and his regiment were later sent to Mogujia but they were overpowered by the Mogu.
Garrosh clashed with Theron too after neglecting to mention a strong mogu presence that resulted in several blood elven casualties. Garrosh then observed Theron and his elves at the mogu ruins in Kun-Lai. The blood elves were planning to capture a mogu leader, Shan Kien. Theron sent a horde hero along with a farstrider and a blood knight to defeat the Mogu Warlord. Garrosh arrived during the battle and threw Gorehowl at the Mogu leader, almost killing him.
Garrosh then demanded information about the Divine Bell but Shan Kien only mocked at him. When Garrosh was preparing for a final blow, Fanlyr stopped him telling him that the mogu was the only key to the Divine Bell and that the blood elves would make him speak. Garrosh agreed and left telling him that should Fanlyr disrespected him once more, his head would be placed atop of a pike in Orgrimmar. Shan Kien was captured and brought to Garrosh'ar Advance. Back in the Shrine of Two Moons, Baine Bloodhoof , too, arrived on Pandaria, and worked to undo or clean up after the chaos Garrosh left behind during his stay, including but not limited to curing sha -corrupted soldiers at the Shrine of Two Moons.
Garrosh discussed the sha power with Lor'themar and Baine, and insisted that the Horde would control the power.
Theron then departed to Silvermoon with a sha artifact to examine it. Garrosh then sent a Horde adventurer to Silvermoon to get information. Like Vol'jin before him, Lor'themar became increasingly wary of Garrosh's rule; and after multiple instances of his people's welfare being disregarded by the warchief including Garrosh's demand to look into the mogu artifact resulting in a sha being released in Silvermoon , Lor'themar considers pulling Quel'Thalas out of Garrosh's Horde, and reconsidering old Alliances.
Baine found a more peaceful way to extract the information, which proved successful. Shan Kien then revealed the location of a tomb, where the Bell was located.
Unbeknownst to the Horde, the Alliance was spying on the interaction and also learned the location. Garrosh sent Ishi to retrieve the Bell only to find that the kaldorei entered the tomb shortly before the Horde arrived and took the bell to Darnassus. Garrosh then sent Fanlyr and some Horde champions to locate the bell in Darnassus, and successfully claim it. Jaina Proudmoore discovered that the Sunreavers played a part in the theft, and purged them from the city of Dalaran.
Many fleeing blood elves including Aethas Sunreaver were rescued by Grand Magister Rommath ; and, in the aftermath of the conflict, the Sunreavers came to hold Garrosh just as responsible for their removal from Dalaran as Jaina herself.
This act put a stop to the prospect of Lor'themar joining the Alliance: by organizing a heist in Darnassus after learning of Lor'themar's talks with Varian and focusing blame on the blood elves for it , Garrosh was able to sabotage the notion of the sin'dorei leaving the Horde.
Garrosh spoke about the Horde's grand destiny, and how he would use the Divine Bell to erase weakness from his orcs and create a stronger Horde. Garrosh then rang the Divine Bell, which turned his Kor'kron into sha. After they were dispatched by the adventurer, Prince Anduin Wrynn intervened and tried to deter Garrosh from using the Divine Bell. Anduin's pleas fell on deaf ears, and Garrosh used the Divine Bell to infest his champion Ishi with the power of the sha, who the adventurer then had to fight.
Though Garrosh encouraged his troops to master sha energy, in the end, none of his champions were able to do so. In the aftermath of the battle, Anduin used the Harmonic Mallet to turn the Divine Bell's chaos into pure harmony.
This temporarily stunned Garrosh before he struck at the bell and destroyed it; causing its rubble to fall on Prince Anduin. The impact of the bell has caused Anduin's bones to shatter. Believing Anduin dead, Garrosh let the Alliance champion live to relay the fate of Anduin to King Varian; thereby illustrating the price for his continued defiance. Garrosh then flew off, maniacally laughing at the thought of the Alliance's, and particularly King Varian's, suffering.
Though the Divine Bell was destroyed, Garrosh was still determined to master sha energy. Garrosh was preoccupied at Domination Point , and paid no mind to the events of the Isle of Thunder. Lor'themar Theron led a Sunreaver -heavy coalition against the returned Thunder King to claim his weaponry as leverage against Garrosh in the event of an uprising.
Fed up with Garrosh's warmongering, large portions of the Horde rose up against him. The already precarious racial division of Orgrimmar took another hit, as the Valley of Spirits was then dominated by the Kor'kron , and various non-orc members of the city are rounded up, chiefly among them the tauren. This turn of events put a dent in Lor'themar and Vol'jin's collaborative plot to overthrow Garrosh, as with his people in direct danger while Theron was finishing up on the Isle of Thunder and across the sea , the Darkspear chieftain was forced to declare the open rebellion and return to Durotar.
Dubbed the Darkspear Rebellion , this first push against Garrosh culminated in the rebels claiming the Echo Isles all the way up to Razor Hill. Thrall , Baine Bloodhoof , and Chen Stormstout also threw their support behind the rebellion, and fought their way ever-closer to Orgrimmar. Simultaneously, Garrosh also faced the threat of an Alliance invasion. SI:7 agents were sent to gain intel on Garrosh's movements and pave the way for the arrival of the Alliance's main force, and also learn of the rebellion taking place.
In order to subvert the Horde further, the Alliance lends aid to the rebellion. Garrosh had not given up on his desire to wield Pandarian artifacts, and sent a goblin excavation force to unearth the dark powers resting under the Vale of Eternal Blossoms , shipping them back to Orgrimmar and storing them in Ragefire Chasm.
Horde agents speculated that Garrosh was preparing for yet another invasion, though the target was unclear. After the goblin excavation team in the Vale of Eternal Blossoms discovered the sealed heart of a deceased Old God , Y'Shaarj , Garrosh traveled to observe his secured bounty. Realizing the heart was dormant, Garrosh fought his way through the Shado-Pan to submerge the heart in the vale's pools.
He was confronted by the Shado Pan's lord, Taran Zhu , who attempted to end Garrosh's rampage across the continent, but was defeated when the warchief choked him with dismantled rails and impaled him upon Gorehowl. Garrosh told his defeated opponent that the other races of the world will no doubt attempt to stop him, and that moreover, he is counting on it: no matter what the world throws at him, Garrosh was confident that his newly-unearthed power would be able to prevail, and that all those against him would find themselves impaled upon Orgrimmar's spires.
Garrosh hurled the dormant heart into the pools, causing a chaotic surge of sha energy which corrupted the surrounding area. Garrosh retreated to his underground fortress, leaving behind even his father's weapon in favor of a new, Old God-forged visage of it - Xal'atoh.
After moving the heart to Orgrimmar, Garrosh became crazier and more xenophobic, [51] though he was not controlled or corrupted by the Old Gods. Garrosh moved the heart into his own personal sanctum within the Underhold , a large underground complex located deep within the Ragefire Chasm below Orgrimmar.
With the entire city under martial law, Garrosh issues commands from within the compound and plans to conquer the entire world for his True Horde using his newfound powers. He has also allowed the Paragons of the Klaxxi within his compound, who act as guardians of the Heart. Garrosh also gifted some of its power to Malkorok. The Alliance and Horde under the name 'The Darkspear Rebellion' formed a coalition to stop the crazed dictator, along with adventurers freshly arrived from containing the destruction Garrosh had laid upon the Vale of Eternal Blossoms.
The group laid siege to the city and successfully made their way into the Underhold and fought past all Garrosh's traps and lieutenants to find Thrall confronting Garrosh and pleading him to cease his genocidal war. Garrosh refused to co-operate, calling Thrall weak and sadistically stating he'll take pleasure in destroying everything the Horde and Alliance had created.
He even briefly tortured his old mentor physically, as his Dark Shaman had tortured the elements for miles around, thus causing them to strike out at Thrall when he attempted to call upon them. Thrall overcame this and faced Garrosh in melee combat, only to be easily beaten.
Garrosh then turned his attention to the adventurers and engaged them in battle with the support of the True Horde, the iron stars, and the power of Y'Shaarj itself. The battle took place not just in the Underhold, but also in Y'Shaarj's twisted pocket dimension, shaped to resemble places where immense Sha outbreaks had occurred on Pandaria. The adventurers held out, however, and in a last-ditch effort Garrosh became an avatar of the Old God by absorbing all the Heart's remaining power.
But it still wasn't enough, and the evil Warchief, at last, collapsed from his wounds, the power of Y'Shaarj dissipating from his exhausted body, after which the Alliance, Horde and Pandaren leaders arrive to take him into custody and decide his fate. In one of the most devastating possible outcomes — as shown by the [ Vision of Time ] — Garrosh lays waste to Stormwind City, leaving the entire harbor in ruins and corrupted by Y'Shaarj's power.
He also impales the corpses of all rebel Horde leaders , as well as the Wrynn family, Jaina Proudmoore , Tyrande Whisperwind and Taran Zhu to adorn a ruined stairway leading to the city proper and to serve as a dire warning for anyone that would oppose his new order. The same vision is encountered during the Heroic mode fight against Garrosh. Another vision shows him to be defeated lying on the ground surrounded by all the leaders of Horde and Alliance.
The final vision of Garrosh shows him to be caged up in the Temple of the White Tiger where Anduin Wrynn visited him, possibly referring to a scene from the War Crimes novel. Thrall, leaning over Garrosh's body, told him of how disappointed he was in him, and prepared to deliver him a final blow: a death sentence carried out by the Doomhammer, but was stopped by King Varian Wrynn , who declared that Garrosh's punishment was not for him alone to decide.
Thrall was also reluctant to allow the Alliance to decide Garrosh's fate. Taran Zhu and Lorewalker Cho suggested that Garrosh instead be taken to Pandaria to stand trial for his heinous crimes against the peoples of Azeroth , to which Varian and Thrall agreed. Garrosh was then taken by Taran Zhu and the Shado-Pan out of the room. After his defeat , Garrosh was transferred to the Temple of the White Tiger where a trial would be conducted for his fate. Caged below the temple, Garrosh dreamed about his father and his home, Draenor.
Garrosh wondered whether, if his father were still alive, he would be proud of his son. When everyone had arrived, Garrosh was brought forth before Taran Zhu , the jury and the many witnesses.
There he was told of the crimes he was being accused of. He merely clapped and made a mockery of the trial, comparing it to the Darkmoon Faire and causing a great commotion. Once things were settled down, he was appointed a defender from the Horde who was Baine Bloodhoof. Baine tried his best to defend Garrosh but he did nothing to help his case. Baine suggested he open up to someone unless he had a death wish. Garrosh decided he would only speak to Anduin Wrynn.
While cautious at first, Anduin accepted. Many times Garrosh and Anduin spoke, discussing many things. Anduin repeatedly tried to get Garrosh to repent and admit what he had done was wrong. Garrosh, however, would always turn things on the young boy and make him question things he held dearly. On the eve of the trial's verdict, Garrosh was extremely agitated. He did all he could to infuriate Anduin. Eventually, this worked, and Anduin nearly attacked him.
Instead, he reached out and smacked the food from Garrosh's hands. Garrosh grabbed his arm and twisted it but Anduin told him the food was poisoned and he had saved his life, which made Garrosh release his arm. Before Anduin left the room, he asked the guards to remove the shackles from around the orc's legs so he could once again walk like a true warrior. Before the verdict was given, Garrosh was given a chance to speak.
He said Tyrande Whisperwind and Baine both gave great arguments. He even spoke to Anduin and said how he believed people could change. Just as Garrosh was about to admit his regrets, he stunned the room by shouting he regrets nothing and would do it all over again.
Kairozdormu , who had been tinkering with the [ Vision of Time ] during all of this, created a portal that allowed him and Garrosh to escape to an alternate Draenor that was set 35 years in the past. Upon surfacing, they happened to be in Nagrand. Garrosh and Kairoz eventually made their way to Nagrand , the lands of the Warsong clan. The plan was to locate the alternate counterpart of Garrosh's father, Grom Hellscream , and rally the orc clans into a different kind of Horde.
But Kairoz did not intend to stop there; he intended to use the shards of the Vision of Time to find his way into many other worlds, and find other Hordes to send back to Azeroth, believing that this would give him infinite power. However, after learning that the shard would be able to take him back to Azeroth of his present time, Garrosh took the shard and stabbed Kairoz to death with it, declaring that orcs would never be used as pawns again.
Traveling to a nearby Warsong encampment, Garrosh came forward as a stranger with no clan but claimed his heart was Warsong. Speaking boldly, he declared that he had come to prevent the Warsongs from becoming slaves, and declared that Grom would have led them willingly to such a fate. As a result of this insult, Garrosh was subjected to a Mak'Rogahn , a "duel of will", to prove his honor by fighting against four members of the Warsong clan who were supposed to be on guard duty and had failed to spot him.
Garrosh defeated his opponents, with the spectators commenting that the stranger fought like Hellscream. Following Grom into his tent, Garrosh spoke vaguely about the fate that awaited the orcish people , that Gul'dan would enslave their race to unseen masters by offering them a "gift" , and that Grom would be the first to take it because he could not tolerate another taking it first. Revealing the shard from the Vision of Time, Garrosh described the kinds of weapons he had used as Warchief of the Horde on Azeroth, including mana bombs and iron stars.
He called on Grom to rally the other orcish clans against their true enemy , and suggested taking the shard to the Stones of Prophecy to show the Warsong leader the truth of his words. Grom cautiously agreed, threatening to take Garrosh's head if he was lying; Garrosh replied that if he could not convince Grom of his sincerity, his life meant nothing.
Garrosh watched as Grom took the shard into the presence of the elemental spirits who showed him, the elements, and the shaman who watched over the stones the truth of Garrosh's words: Gul'dan's bargain with Kil'jaeden , the drinking of the demons' blood showing that Grom had indeed been the first to do so , the First and Second Wars against the humans , their defeat at the hands of the Alliance , and the withdrawal from demon magics that left the orcish people broken.
However, Garrosh intentionally hid the truth of Grom's redemption at Demon Fall Canyon by killing the elder shaman who had seen ahead and interrupting the vision before Grom could see it.
When Grom emerged from the vision, he pledged that he would not allow his people to be slaves, and sent runners to the other clans to tell them of what he had learned.
Grom called on Garrosh to stand at his side and fight with the Warsong, for there was a long road ahead; Garrosh proudly declared that he would fight to the death. Gul'dan sent a message to the orcs promising them untold power. In reply, Grommash Hellscream sent Garrosh, disguised as a messenger, to Gul'dan wishing to know more about the cruel orc's intent. Gul'dan replied that he had seen a vision, and a Legion wanted the orcs as their vanguard.
Much to Gul'dan's surprise, Garrosh knew serving this Legion meant drinking the blood of Mannoroth and enslaving the orcs to the demons. Angered at Garrosh's accusations of slavery, and proclaiming himself to be a god, Gul'dan had his guards remove the messenger from the premises.
In response, Garrosh slew the guards. Gul'dan told Garrosh that in three days the orcs would drink from Mannoroth's blood on a mountaintop and from there march to victory. Garrosh lowered his hood, revealing his identity, and told Gul'dan that in three days Grommash will stand on the mountain as well and lead the orcs to embrace their true fate. On the fateful day when the orcs were poised to drink the blood of Mannoroth and become slaves to the Legion, Garrosh accompanied his father to confront Gul'dan and give the warlock the Warsong clan's answer to his offer of power.
However in this universe, Grom rejected Gul'dan's encouragement to drink the blood, and Garrosh coordinated an ambush on the warlock and Mannoroth himself using the orcs' new technology. Garrosh's Iron Star was launched at Mannoroth, distracting him for long enough to allow Grom to execute the demon. Garrosh pushed his father out the way of Mannoroth's dying explosion, saving Grom from the fate that felled him in the prime timeline.
Pulling a stunned Gul'dan to his feet, Garrosh then drew a fel-bloodied Gorehowl from the demon's corpse and tossed it to his father, who proclaimed their victory and independence — as conquerors, never slaves - to the gathered masses. This pivotal moment was all that Garrosh's interference in the timeline had led to, and thus the Iron Horde came to be. Garrosh gave Blackhand schematics for machinery and rose to prominence as one of the Warlords of the Iron Horde, and the leader of the Warsong clan while his father holds the position of Warchief over all clans.
He issued to capture Gruul. He had also been present when Grommash "convinced" Ner'zhul and his Shadowmoon clan to join the Iron Horde. Khadgar and Chromie too saw his vision in Nagrand's mountains. When a citadel in the heart of Tanaan began constructing, he suggested the name Hellfire. He was personally responsible for the Ironmarch 's invasion of Azeroth. He ordered Zaela to claim Upper Blackrock Spire as the forward base of the invading force, where a doomsday weapon capable of making Blackrock Mountain erupt and subsequently destroy large swaths of the continent - including Stormwind - is to be built.
The draenei under Yrel blamed him for the fall of Telaar and they knew him as "the son of Hellscream". He began fighting with the adventurers, Durotan and Yrel, only to be stopped by Thrall who issued a mak'gora. The pair clash at the Stones of Prophecy—the site where Garrosh had first learned of his father's redemption. As the pair traded blows, Garrosh argues that everything he did was for the Horde; Thrall replies that Garrosh " failed the Horde.
You failed ME! Tightly bound by the elements, Garrosh roars that Thrall made him what he is; Thrall responds that Garrosh chose his own destiny. A single bolt of lightning ends Garrosh's life. Despite his death, the effects of his actions would carry on for some time into the future. His meddling in the affairs of the alternate Draenor set off a chain of unbroken events that eventually led the Burning Legion back to Azeroth in their greatest invasion of the world yet. This war ultimately ended with the Legion's final defeat, but at the cost of Azeroth's own well-being.
The effects of his attack on Theramore and his quest for the Divine Bell left Jaina Proudmoore with deep mental scars that led to her leaving the Kirin Tor and continuing to blame the Horde as a whole for Garrosh's actions. These scars would manifest as echoes when Jaina was pulled into Thros , the Blighted Lands.
After Garrosh's death, his soul was confined to the realm of Revendreth to atone for his crimes. Due to his large amount of anima , the venthyr used him as one of their reliable "workhorses" from which they could continue extracting the vital energy even after the Shadowlands began suffering from the anima drought.
Garrosh proved resistant to Dormazain's usual torture methods, but the soulrender looked forward to spending millennia finding his weakness. The heroes of Azeroth eventually arrived and confronted Dormazain, who continued tormenting Garrosh to unleash waves of anima against his enemies. When the soulrender was defeated, Garrosh broke free from his chains. Just as he had done during his trial in Pandaria, he declared that he would proudly make all of the choices in his life again and yelled that he would submit to no one—not Dormazain, not the Jailer , and not "that coward Thrall".
He then picked up his torturer's blade and, with a final cry of "For the Horde", leapt at Dormazain to create an explosion of anima that obliterated them both and left nothing behind of the former warchief's soul but a pile of ash.
Thrall later confided in the soul of his mother Draka that he still felt responsibility for Garrosh's actions, but she told him that Hellscream had chosen his own path. Thrall insisted that it was he who had set Garrosh on that path, but Draka disagreed, saying that all Thrall had done was offer him a choice.
Either way, Garrosh's path had now ended, while Thrall's continued forward. Vol'jin replaced Garrosh in for the following quests:. The battle with Garrosh was arguably the most difficult of all the faction leaders, a major factor being his strategic position.
At face value, the several entrances to Orgrimmar can seem appealing to a would-be raid, though Grommash Hold itself has been moved to the most populated area of Orgrimmar- leaving Garrosh flanked by a large amount of Horde players at almost all times. Garrosh's lack of elite guards is compensated by the Warchief's Herald that pulls with him, and the small amount of space allocated for the fight- leaving most of the raid susceptible to AOE and easy crowd control from Horde players, most deadly being chain fears on healers or tanks.
It is also important to note that vanishing or stealthing into the room is almost impossible as the pair of Forsaken Delegation Deathguards in the Hold can see through stealth effects. Garrosh has a number of powerful abilities in his arsenal. Garrosh also uses berserker charge, dealing roughly 17k damage and knocking back the target by 15 yards.
He also makes use of a [ Shockwave ] ability with an impressive range, dealing around 17k damage to all enemies to his front and stunning them for 5 seconds. The fight with Garrosh is highly unpredictable due to the immediate outside interference.
The near-constant threat of a large Horde defense force can make or break the attempt, and a wipe can be incredibly difficult to recover from. The best way to deal with Garrosh is to strike at a time where Orgrimmar's player traffic will be lowest, and downing him as fast as possible within Grommash hold. Pulling him outside is ill-advised, as the Horde will become even more aware of their Warchief's predicament, and a massive wave of constant guard spawns in addition to this can prove disastrous.
If the raid is successful, a quick escape is vital — like Lor'themar Theron , Garrosh is only on a minute respawn timer.
Players must also be careful of Horde players kiting Gamon into the area now that he is a level 85 elite. Gamon will randomly charge players and use his battleshout to increase Garrosh's attack power. Time is a factor with most city leaders, and Garrosh is perhaps the most notable example as to why. Much like his father, Garrosh is a warrior-born.
Though Garrosh was once highly ashamed of his heritage, a new fighting spirit was awakened within him following Thrall's revelations about who Grom truly was. His hot-headed nature came to the test during the war in Northrend , where Garrosh was quick to dismiss the more practical concerns during war in favor of a glorious battle, believing the fighting spirit of the Horde alone was enough to bring down the Scourge. He has employed ruthless but effective tactics on the battlefield, as noted by Saurfang.
Unlike Thrall, who preferred to keep discreet tabs on his more dubious allies such as those speculated to have ties with the Shadow Council , Garrosh has no qualms about speaking his mind — making no effort to hide his low opinion on the Forsaken.
Garrosh strongly believes in the value of honor, and in a fair fight. This had led him to show a distaste for the tactics of both the Forsaken and the Alliance and threatened the life of Korm Blackscar after the events of the Broken Front. He personally executed Overlord Krom'gar for the murder of innocents and seems to have gleamed a number of Saurfang's creeds.
Though he seems to have subsequently lost them. Garrosh is well-known for his fierce hatred of the Alliance. This appears to stem from his belief that the orcish people deserve a better quality of life than Durotar can offer and views the Alliance as his primary obstacle in making this happen. To this end, he has expressed the desire for war with the Horde's rival faction multiple times, and was of the opinion that the Horde should simply take what it needs — both before and after his ascension to Warchief.
His failures to easily attain whatever he wants for the Horde, the Alliance's tenacity in the war, and the doubt and disrespect the rest of the Horde show him, slowly push him towards insanity with his aggression extending to the Dragonflights and culminating in a plan of complete genocide of anything non-orc.
His disregard for a more diplomatic approach is applauded by many of the orcs, who view his uncompromising attitude in regards to securing his people a future to be inspiring. Garrosh himself is becoming aware of the tested bonds between him and his fellow leaders of the Horde, though he doesn't care, and indeed his solution to them is simply to make them enemies as well.
In anticipation of the Tides of War novel's release, WoW Insider had the opportunity to interview the author behind the novel, Christie Golden :. Garrosh's personality in game and out has done a lot of shifting back and forth. We see him get a lot darker in Tides. How did you go about developing his character? He was very hostile about his father and ashamed of his father, and it took Thrall to say, "Hey, look, you know your dad did some pretty amazing things despite everything.
He also had to prove himself in battle externally. And now he is surrounding himself with some very bad and dangerous advisors, externally. Because I think that at the core, he doesn't really know. He wants to do well.
He wants to preserve the orcs and their pride and their history. But I think he is actually a rather malleable person whose opinions can change. He doesn't have a strong core. I think the main difference -- Jaina has a very strong core.
And when adversity and disaster and personal torment rip her down to nothing but that core, that core is still intact. It's hurt, but it's intact. And Garrosh doesn't really have a strong core. So what he believes kind of changes depending on what the situation is and who's talking. And I think that does not a good strong leader make.
In his first appearance in the Burning Crusade, Garrosh used a generic Mag'har model with scars across his cheeks, a calm expression, and a topknot likely intended to reference his father's long hair.
Grom's model was also depicted like this in the vision shown by Thrall due to model limitations. His trading card game model was an exact illustration of his in game model. In Garrosh's next appearance in the comic " Threat! In Cataclysm , Garrosh's model was changed to a hulking yellow-eyed orc with a smaller sized head likely in reference to the comic , his jaw was tattooed, and his head was now fully shaved.
Ultimately, Garrosh's appearance bulky with a shaved head had become practically the inverse of Grom's lean with long hair. Garrosh's use of the sha during the Siege of Orgrimmar left scars on his skin in the form of dark tracings resembling webby fingers.
There, the skull can be seen as part of Garrosh's throne. Part of the tusks were cut off and fashioned into Garrosh's new shoulder armor. My arms grow restless, anxiously waiting to drive my axes into the skull of the Lich King.
Thrall would have us wait and let the Scourge continue to grow in strength. I will not have this! If we are to end the threat of the Lich King, we must sail to Northrend and give him the full might of the Horde!
Our forces are ready and willing to exact revenge for the deaths wrought by the plague and invasion. Varok Saurfang turns around to speak with Garrosh. What was the.. How do I get Pet's Hunter? Build 4 Answers How and where do you learn to use guns?
Side Quest 9 Answers What is the quickest way? Main Quest 6 Answers Why can't I loot anything? General 7 Answers How do I speak in the general chat? General 1 Answer. Ask A Question. Browse More Questions. Keep me logged in on this device. Forgot your username or password? User Info: pegusus pegusus 11 years ago 3 And orcs die of old age at around eighty years old anyway.
Anyone deleted all their characters? How come people don't talk about how we grew older. Im just coming back to WoW after being gone for several months.
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