Advertisement

All the World's a Stage: So you want to be Forsaken

This installment of All the World's a Stage is the ninth in a series of roleplaying guides in which we find out all the background information you need to roleplay a particular race or class well, without embarrassing yourself.



There are those who like to buy Hello Kitty paraphernalia, decorate their bedroom with stuffed animals, or perhaps just smile at anyone they pass on the street. The Forsaken would eat those people for breakfast.

I see, dear readers, that I have caused some of you to recoil in horror at the very thought of such depravity. But to the Forsaken it is not uncommon to view other people as potential lunch -- the reason being that the Forsaken are not really "people" as such. They used to be people, they remember being people, and yet now they are not. Their bodies are decayed and some of their flesh is missing -- and yet they are doomed to walk this world under the curse of undeath, animated by evil magic rather than natural life energy, denied all those things that living people enjoy.

Consider for a moment the pleasures of the flesh: the rich taste of food in your mouth, the soft touch of the breeze in your hair, or the embrace of your dearest loved one. Consider also the feeling in your body when you rise to heights of anger or fear, joy or sadness. Now imagine if all those were taken away -- you may still eat, but your meals no longer taste good or bad; the breeze simply disturbs the stiff remains of hair on your head; and the embrace of your loved one would feel like the touch of wax upon wax, if anyone could love you enough to touch you anymore. You don't even feel that love in your heart anymore -- no feeling, no matter how passionate, can make it beat even once more. The feelings you used to live with every day are merely ideas now, reminders of a time when you lived in the body that now traps you in its cold and dark materials.

If you were thus afflicted, could you maintain any sense of compassion?



A question of morality

If your answer is yes, then congratulations: you would be one of the "good" Forsaken, like Leonid Barthalomew, "the Revered," who view undeath as a kind of disease to be treated with the proper medicine, firm in the belief that there is a cure to be found somewhere out there. But you would no longer feel any pleasure in being good, no sense of moral satisfaction, or swell of righteous pride in your blood. You do what is right purely because of your firm conviction that it is the right thing to do.

If your answer was no, however, or perhaps a confused shade of "I don't know," then welcome to the massed ranks of those former humans who dwell in a state of moral ambiguity, sometimes unable to tell right from wrong, and sometimes unable to care.

In order to roleplay a Forsaken well, you must also understand the story of the humans of Azeroth, because the Forsaken were once human too. If you haven't read that story already, be sure to do so now. The Forsaken of today would have once been, for the most part, the soldiers, farmers, or other inhabitants of Lordaeron, caught by surprise when their entire grain supply was infected with the undead plague. Through no fault of their own, they were infected with the plague that twisted their bodies into mindless zombie slaves of the evil Lich King, soldiers in his unstoppable Scourge.

A twisted mortality

The people of Lordaeron's dead bodies were no longer under their own control. They were forced to witness first hand as their own arms and legs started to carry out the will of their evil master, perhaps even inflicting violence and death of people they once loved. Perhaps all this would have been too much for some, and fortunately some Forsaken may be blessed with no memory of this time.

The torture of this slavery did not last too long, however. Soon, the Lich King began to lose control over some of his zombies, enabling them to regain their own consciousness and identity. (Your character probably wouldn't know too much about the reasons for this, except that it might have something to do with an attack on the Scourge by Illidan). Sylvanas Windrunner, once Ranger-General of the high-elven city of Silvermoon, was among the first to regain control of her own mind, and it was she who rallied the others into one force, and defined for them their new identity as Forsaken.

Together, they fought a war with the demonic Dreadlords who sought to take advantage of the Lich King's weakness to kill Arthas and take Lordaeron for themselves. Sylvanas and the Forsaken were victorious, of course, and they set up their new home in the bowels of Lordaeron city, now known as the Undercity. Now, about 5 years have gone by since those fateful events, and the Forsaken are still fiercely loyal to their savior... for the most part.

Guess who's coming to dinner

It is known that Sylvanas is preparing some kind of new plague to be used against the Scourge forces in Northrend. Some say that this new plague should not only be used on their undead enemies but on the living as well. Still, the Dark Lady Sylvanas holds her secrets tightly, and the Royal Apothecary Society isn't telling much either.

Although Sylvanas has arranged for them to officially be part of the Horde now, there are many questions as to just how committed the Forsaken are to this new relationship. Many of the living simply cannot accept the undead, although there are some, especially among the tauren, who hope to help the Forsaken somehow undo their curse of undeath. Everyone is hesitant to associate with the Forsaken at first, but it is not impossible for them to form true relationships with people. Perhaps they could even become close enough that the Forsaken wouldn't have them over for supper... so to speak.


For more information about the Forsaken, check out WoWWiki's information, as well as the life-story of Sylvanas as the focal point of the Forsaken story. Dramatis Personae, as always, has an excellent quick start guide to creating a Forsaken character, too. Finally, there are many interesting things to come in the Forsaken story with Wrath of the Lich King, though you'll have to experience those for yourself.


All the World's a Stage wishes you happy Halloween a couple weeks early! Be sure to check out the rest of the articles in this series on roleplaying within the lore, and consider how you might add some flesh to the bones of your character.