makanidotdot:8.3 dailies in the vale reminded me of these pranksters in War Crimes panda…&hel
makanidotdot:8.3 dailies in the vale reminded me of these pranksters in War Crimes panda……….i think ur lying but IN ANY CASE, since this is maybe more unintelligible than some of my other niche lore related drawings, here’s a rough summary:The Celestials claim ownership over Garrosh at the end of Mists of Pandaria, and want the Alliance and Horde to argue for what type of punishment he should endure: execution, or indefinite imprisonment because they won’t execute someone who isn’t 100% evil. Tyrande is chosen to argue for execution, Baine is chosen to argue for imprisonment. They are both righteous, passionate nerdy Good Guys and they pour their heart and soul into giving the best arguments possible over a several day long trial. The end of the trial is interrupted when Garrosh is set free and escapes with the help of a bad bronze dragon, a few other criminals, and Wrathion. This is what leads into Warlords of Draenor. After the dust settles from the escape, the Celestials reveal their minds were made up from the beginning about the trial: Nobody is above redemption, they were never going to execute Garrosh. They were putting *everyone else* at the trial on trial. So for Tyrande, not only does she watch Garrosh moon everybody and escape to go do more more potentially world ending crimes, these neon balloon animals tell her she never had a chance of accomplishing her goal no matter how well she argued, and they were instead judging her the whole time. There is no real resolution for her in the book either, for her the story sort of just ends with her reaction of like “WHAT..???” lool Honestly the book is pretty fun, this is the one WoW book I could actually recommend to other humans. It’s a ridiculous premise but one that means all the racial leaders are crammed into the same room and you sort of just get to see what all the characters are made of. -- source link
#warcraft#war crimes