Know Your Lore: Saronite

It's nigh-ubiquitous in Wrath of the Lich King. You can pull it out of the ground pretty much anywhere. It's crafted into armor and weapons from powerful epics to crafted items to increase our skills. It makes up the walls of Icecrown Citadel, and the bones of Malykriss, the Lich King's planned replacement for Acherus. It makes up the bulk of the Scourge's material for its mindless warriors as well as its fortifications and siege engines, and the Vrykul even presses the living into slavery in Icecrown in order to meet their master's demand for more and more of it. But this is no ordinary metal: the Tuskarr call it the "Black Blood of Yogg-Saron" and whisper in hushed tones that it may yet shake the pillars of Heaven. (Well, I assume they do. Fella named Jack Burton told me that.)
Unlike cobalt and titanium, the metals that seems to occur naturally in Northrend, saronite's presence is due to the presence of a trapped old god. As you no doubt deduced from the name, Saronite is nothing less than a creation of the terrible Yogg-Saron himself. The enslaved miners toiling for the Vrykul near Ymirheim eventually go mad, and even if freed, hurl themselves into the depths to seek communion with the god of death. In his hubris, the Lich KIng seeks to prove his mastery of death, his transcendance of the state by exploiting the products of Yogg-Saron's imprisonment.
But as Yogg-Saron himself says, "No king rules forever." And as we storm the very gates of Icecrown Citadel and make our way through the Forge of Souls, past the Pit of Saron where even deeper veins of Yogg-Saron's Black Blood are unearthed, and stalk the Halls of Reflection themselves it seems clear that the dependence of the Scourge on the death metal may be its undoing... if it isn't ours first.
You first start running into Saronite early as you proceed through Northrend. In Whisper Gulch in the north of Howling Fjord you'll run into madmen who have fallen to the siren call of the old god via working with the tainted metal. Both the Alliance and the Horde have their difficulties with these lunatics, and both are understandably intrigued. While Yogg-Saron's influence pops up again in the Grizzly Hills, that doesn't seem directly related to saronite itself, but rather the roots of the failed world-tree Vordrassil penetrating into Yogg-Saron's prison. Still, the madness of the Grizzly Hills furbolg and the corruption of Ursoc bear striking similarities to saronite's effects.
In the Dragonblight both the Horde and Alliance run into saronite and its effects. Borus Ironbender sends Horde players to investigate the Scourge's weapons and to retrieve samples of the so-called 'Black Blood of Yogg-Saron' (it helps if you bring your Six-Demon Bag for this) while Alliance players discover their new saronite mine is overrun with the Scourge and confront the mystery of this strange bleeding ore. The corpse of Slinkin the Demo-Gnome also provides a journal detailing the strange, almost contemptuous manner in which those few Scourge who can think for themselves refer to Yogg-Saron even as they mine up the metal associated with him.
Saronite makes a return appearance in Zul'Drak as players raid a crashed Scourge necropolis in the quest Pure Evil, which gives players a chance to watch the luminaries of the Argent Crusade try their level best to defeat a small chunk of ore and fail spectacularly. The interesting thing is, by this point if you're a plate class you're probably wearing some saronite gear or at least have been working it for some time if you're a blacksmith. (Not even counting epics or the various saronite gear that starting Death Knights acquire, there's a lot of saronite gear in the game for leveling characters.) The discovery that you're wearing the hardened blood of an old god on your head or crotch or what have you has been detailed before (Disgraph focuses on a different material explanation for saronite so if you're offended by poop jokes, don't click that link.) but in all seriousness I have to believe personally that the entire explanation for saronite has to creep people out just a little.
There's tantalizing links between Icecrown and the Storm Peaks, especially Ulduar, that revolve around saronite. Darkspeaker R'khem in Icecrown's Saronite Mine is held captive by the Vrykul toiling away for the Scourge, and like General Vezax he appears to have saronite for blood: Vezax himself comes right out and says that the Black Blood of Yogg-Saron courses through him, giving rise to vaporized saronite that can even coaelsce and attack as an animus. This, combined with the madness that those exposed to saronite for long enough, brings questions: is the end result of saronite madness and corruption transformation into a faceless one? Are the insane miners in Ymirhelm the source of the faceless ones patrolling the old Nerubian city beneath Icecrown Citadel? Is Vezax himself a transformed entity, changed into a walking monstrosity by exposure to the elder god's blood, tainted and twisted by saronite?
Considering I'm carrying around two axes I got in the Pit of Saron, maybe I should be considering this more closely.
To some degree the Scourge seem immunized to this process of corruption due to their being dead already. Herald Volazj, who is at war with the Scourge in Ahn'Katet on behalf of his master Yogg-Saron, seems to make statements that indicate that the Scourge stand apart from both life and death. (His entire quote list may be found here.) While the quotation in question could refer to the old gods themselves, considering that Ahn'Katet is under attack by the Scourge the phrase "They do not die; they do not live. They are outside the cycle." at least could be aimed at them, and it could explain both why the Scourge can make such free use of saronite and why they prove so difficult for the servitors of the old gods to defeat. If they're immune to saronite corruption, one of the best weapons of Yogg-Saron's servants (turning your enemies into allies) is lost, while the Scourge themselves can perform that very same trick by killing your own minions then raising them as undead. Saronite corruption, a powerful weapon of subjugation, seems to have its teeth pulled when dealing with those who stand outside the very cycle Yogg-Saron exemplifies as a god of death.
As we march into Icecrown Citadel, saronite continues to make its presence felt. Despite Yogg-Saron's 'death' in Ulduar (raise your hands if you think he's really dead... yeah, me neither) the Scourge continues to mine the stuff out of the Pit of Saron at a prodigious rate. It's used as material in the reforging of Quel'Delar, which turns out to be a bad idea (hey, maybe we shouldn't reforge this sword out of the solidified essence of a god of pure evil... you think? Maybe?) and it's used in the creation of Shadowmourne by the Ashen Verdict, who claim to have finally figured out a way to bend saronite to their will instead of being bent by it. And of course, every step you take in Icecrown Citadel, every weapon or metal armor you loot from the fallen enemy, you're surrounded in the pulsating, breathing metal forged out of the black blood of death itself.
Patch 3.3 is the last major patch of Wrath of the Lich King. With the new Icecrown Citadel 5-man dungeons and 10/25-man raid arriving soon, patch 3.3 will deal the final blow to Arthas. WoW.com's Guide to Patch 3.3 will keep you updated with all the latest patch news.Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Odds and ends, Instances, Leveling, Know your Lore, Wrath of the Lich King
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Mystery of the Unborn Val'kyr
The latest patch 5.3 news
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Reader Comments (Page 4 of 4)
splodesondeath Dec 16th 2009 3:35PM
Don't quote me on this, but I remember reading something about C'thun pulling an "only a setback!" on us in Cataclysm, i.e. C'thun is coming back.
If this is true, maybe we can expect a return of Silithyst in the expansion? I think they mentioned they were going to give Silithus an edit or two, perhaps it gets totally Qiraji'd up to Cenarion Hold. What I mean by that is that they build more fortifications and giant palaces all the way up to there. Who knows.
Marcosius Dec 17th 2009 12:34PM
At least in the comics C'thun was trying to corrupt Med'an, seemingly beaten and unmoving as he was. I do not know how it is actually now, or how it went since here the series is woefully behind the states and I sorta lost interest due to slow ass publisher and utterly horrible translation, though as fascinating the stories are.
kdeselms Dec 16th 2009 4:56PM
A big thumbs up for the Pork Chop Express reference in this article. Now, I'm not sayin' I've been everywhere and I've done everything...
nekorion Dec 16th 2009 5:48PM
"and stalk the Halls of Reflection themselves it seems clear that the dependence of the Scourge on the death metal may be its undoing"
I didn't know scourge had a preference in music.
Vodkamartini Dec 16th 2009 6:19PM
The Scourge are into Dethklok.
The Faceless Ones are more into the classical thing, but you can find them sneaking Gwar CDs. Feed the World Maggot!
SbE Dec 16th 2009 8:55PM
From reading all of Herald Volazj's quotes, it seems he is talking about the old gods and not the Scourge. One of the lines is "Gaze into the void. It is the perpetuity in which they dwell" which pretty much locks out the Scourge as a possibility, assuming of course that all the quotes refer to the same "they", which the other quotes seem to corroborate.
Gaurth Dec 16th 2009 10:03PM
Rossi, I Just want you to know that you are by far my favourite writer on wow.com, your pieces are interesting and informative and always a good read.
You, sir. have a fan in me.
Keep it up.
On Topic, it would have been epically hilarious if when they released Ulduar the first raid that made it to yoggy got a big surprise when he reclaimed all his stuff off them, leaving them naked and shivering in the face of the mighty old god who they then have to kill to get all their hard-earned gear back.
Not very viable, but a cool thought I had while reading this.
Tordenflesk Dec 17th 2009 7:40AM
All i know is that i want to mine the first boss in PoS. Why is it that a dude with the biggest node can't be mined?
Silfaroth Dec 17th 2009 9:59AM
The quote is far more likely a reference to the old god Yogg-Saron than the scourge, in keeping with Herald Volazj other quotes.
Which puts his other quote "Where one falls, many shall take its place." and the Titans decision to imprison rather than kill the old gods in a whole new light :)
Sl0th Dec 17th 2009 1:53PM
Thinking about it, it makes some sense that Saronite could warp other being to eventually become the Faceless. Remember C'thun? he created the Qiraji from the Aqir (Or the Silithid. It's all a bit confusing, to be honest.) The upshot is that C'thun took an existing race and twisted them into his Avatars. Perhaps the Faceless were created in a similar manner by warping sentient beings who lived in Northrend (Given the size of your average Faceless, I'd wager giants or Vrykul.)
The more I think about it, the more sense it makes, actually. The whole Curse of Flesh was engineered to change the mineral-based creations of the Titan so the Old Gods corrupt them. Perhaps what Yogg-Saron did was further warp the physiology of some of the cursed beings to create his Faceless servants by imbuing them with his 'blood.'
It certainly does put things into perspective. By adopting our myriad of Saronite gear to counter the Scourge's use of Saronite, we may have inadvertently cause more harm to ourselfs than good. Well, I guess the Forsaken would be as immune as the Scourge, but the rest of us are in trouble.
Shredicine Dec 18th 2009 5:56AM
DEATH METAL!
Axxom Feb 22nd 2010 2:35PM
Maybe this is setting us up for the end of the game. Slowly from here through Cataclysm to the last expansion our characters will go crazy and become uncontrollable. At the end of the last expansion there will be an Old God who just laughs at our foolishness, and then the World of Warcraft would be no more D: