![]() Thrall: Twilight of the Aspects is another great book by Christie Golden, as people already said, she's a reference when looking for Warcraft Novels. With Mist of Pandaria, especially with Siege of Orgrimmar, you'll understand Garrosh is not at all like they portayed him originally, but it is still a great novel nonetheless in my opinion. The Shattering: Prelude to Cataclysm by Christie Golden was also a great book, it gave you everything you had to know before the launch of Cataclysm and a lot more background information on the newly appointed Warchief Garrosh Hellscream, which, was somewhat pictured as a not so bad, almost nice individual. ![]() If you like Malfurion, the night elves or the druids in general, you'll probably enjoy this one anyway. ![]() Knaak was interesting, it had an interesting story linked to the Emerald Dream, but I was disappointed that they turned a good reason to make an ''Emerald Dream expansion'' into a few hundreds pages novel. The fact that they split their lore to different mediums is questionable and I can perfectly understand why some players are upset that they can't follow their favorite game's story entirely in-game, but as a book nerd, I love being able to access more content faster, even in the form of a novel, since Blizzard's artists can't push new patches every months.Īnyway, back to the novels (There might be some slight-ish spoilers, but nothing big) Īrthas: Rise of the Lich King by Christie Golden, has to be one of my favorite novels, if you loved Arthas, followed him through the years through W3 and Wow, you'll love this one. The new Hardcover Novels from Arthas:Rise of the Lich King to Vol'jin Shadow of the Horde and soon War Crimes, are rich in lore and do a great job at filling the voids left by Blizzard when they are not able to tell their whole story directly in-game. To me they were a good addition to the rich in-game story the first three RTS games brought and they also gave me a great introduction to the current World of Warcraft lore when I first started playing. I found this list here that shows pretty much everything to know about all the Warcraft Novels/Books/Etc īeing a Warcraft 1 through 3 player and Big Lore Nerd, I enjoyed the first few series The Original Serie (Day of the Dragon, Lord of the clans,The Last Guardian), The War of the Ancients Trilogy and the first few early World of Warcraft novels. It was actually pretty cheap on Amazon when I got it considering it's size and weight, which is great.Īs for the Novels themselves, I started reading them years ago when I was still playing Warcraft 3 so I started reading them in chronological order until I reached a point where I had to wait for new one to come out. ![]() ![]() It's pretty much a TL DR version of WowPedia with lots of cool info and arts. If you love everything that revolves around the Warcraft universe and want to know more about the whole universe, the villains, the good guys or any cool character we hear about in the lore, The World of Warcraft Visual Guide is a must. If you're a big fan of the Warcraft Universe and it's lore, you'll probably want to read them all anyway, but here's my view on some of them. ![]()
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