Know Your Lore: Hold any form, take any shape -- The elements, part four

We're up to water now in our survey of the elemental forces of the Warcraft setting. Having covered fire and earth previously, we now take a look at the forces of water led by Neptulon the Tidehunter. Unlike his rivals, Neptulon is devious enough to manipulate the other elemental lords into combat, crafty enough to gain a foothold on Outland with followers among the Naga and Twilight's Hammer (Neptulon's influence reaches far enough that he managed to have a powerful minion, Frost Lord Ahune, summoned to the Coilfang Slave Pens in an attempt to outflank Ragnaros), and of all elementals, those of water are even willing to work with mortals in an attempt to sabotage their enemies.
What is known about Neptulon is that he fought alongside the other elemental lords in the war with the titans, that even as powerful as they were, the lords of the elements eventually fell and were banished. However, despite the defeat of the Old Gods and the imprisoning of the elementals on artificial planes created to house them, Neptulon found ways to affect the mortal world. The ancient troll empire of the Gurubashi eventually felt the wrath of the Tidehunter and his krakken servitors.
The Third Troll LegendBut the Krakken are old, very old. They remembered when the land was first born from the sea.
They remembered when the Old Ones ruled and when the Travelers came and cast them down. They remembered when magic was new.
They are old and they hold many secrets. And though Min'loth's spell was strong, it, like the troll, was mortal.
And so it failed.
They remembered when the Old Ones ruled and when the Travelers came and cast them down. They remembered when magic was new.
They are old and they hold many secrets. And though Min'loth's spell was strong, it, like the troll, was mortal.
And so it failed.
While the Gurubashi had already been weakened by the Atal'ai priests of Hakkar the Blood God, it was Neptulon and his Krakken who dealt the death blow to that once-proud nation, striking down Var'gazul, the last emperor of the Gurubashi, and his chief mystic, Min'loth. Neptulon's ire seems to have been aimed at an ancient artifact named the Stone of the Tides, which Min'loth used to summon and bind vast armies of water elementals to his service in a bid to restore the Gurubashi trolls to a position of eminence that they had lost following the war with the Atal'ai and Hakkar.
Neptulon and the water elementals, as is the tendency of water, aim to erode the earth, saturate the air and extinguish the fire of their rivals. It seems that despite the titans' victory in the war, Neptulon has found ways to interfere in the day to day affairs of Azeroth ever since, from striking down the Gurubashi to setting up a faction in the wilds of Azshara to interfere with Ragnaros and his minions. (Even something as small as Tsunaman's activities in the Stonetalon Mountains must be considered in this light.) While we know the elementals of fire are in large part present due to Ragnaros' summoning by Thaurissan during the Three Hammer's War, and the elementals of earth seem to benefit from Therazane's brood and their presence to some degree, Neptulon appears to make use of the oceans to help him continue his influence.
It's also worth noting that while shaman generally interact with all the elements, for some reason those of water are willing and able to be summoned and bound by the students of the magical traditions of the Kirin Tor, which are themselves based on high elven magics brought to the Eastern Kingdoms by descendants of the Highborne of the Kaldorei. This of course leads one to consider why only Neptulon, out of all of the elemental lords, seems to allow this kind of thing and what connection (if any) it has to the ancient troll water elemental summoning that led to the end of the Gurubashi. Did Neptulon use avaricious trolls to weaken the barrier between the Abyssal Maw and Azeroth enough to at least slip some of his most powerful servants through, if not come through himself?
It's been established that mortal magics can only bind and control the weaker servitors of the water lord. Neptulon's krakken servants (like the Lurker Below) are more difficult to summon and control. Some of them seem to be regarded as gods themselves (Oacha'noa in the waters around Northrend), and it's unknown if all krakken serve Neptulon or not, but based on the use of multiple krakken against the Gurubashi, it would seem likely that he has a substantial force of these awesome beasts as his servants. We also know that the naga seem divided between those that worship Neptulon and those that have either never worshiped him or have turned against him. Not only does a naga sea witch lead you to slay a krakken named Leviroth worshiped by the Kvaldir, you can encounter Skar'this the Heretic (heretical in that he worships Neptulon) in the Slave Pens. With the coming of Cataclysm giving us a chance to see the naga and kvaldir in further conflict, the nature of Neptulon's relationship with either will hopefully be more defined, but it seems possible that he uses his krakken to control the kvaldir and has worshippers among the naga as well. Further evidence of the strained relations between at least some naga and the water elementals includes the imprisonment of Hydross in Serpentshrine Cavern, where he is punished for disobedience by being poisoned.
Given Neptulon's tendency to enjoy pitting enemies against each other or manipulating others, it's not hard to imagine him using the kvaldir to punish the naga for turning away from him, although it's hard to say exactly how far worship of the water lord has ever gone in naga society. We also don't know if the repeated elemental incursions have a direct connection to the elemental lords, or if Princess Tempestria is related to Neptulon in the same manner that Thunderaan was to Al'akir. For that matter, is Frost Lord Ahune considered a separate elemental lord, when he is clearly depicted as being subservient to Neptulon yet powerful enough to challenge Ragnaros to direct combat? Is Ahune the "Thunderaan" of the water elementals? Neptulon is subtle and his machinations vast ... He even has a hand in the Scepter of the Shifting Sands quest through the presence of Maws, an enormous shark sometimes called "The Wrath of Neptulon." (It's possibly just a metaphor, although it's hard to believe Neptulon wouldn't have some degree of control over it.)
In Cataclysm, we'll finally get the chance to beard the water lord in his Abyssal Maw, perhaps laying bare the secrets of the Tidehunter once and for all. Until then, all we know of the water elementals is that, like their element, they are subtle and erosive.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Lore, Know your Lore, Cataclysm
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 3)
thegatherer May 26th 2010 12:36PM
you mean, they will do a gay little dance, and potentially turn into a fat kid?
PsyWulf May 26th 2010 1:21PM
Fu.......sioooooon....haaaaaaaaaaaa
JC_Icefox May 26th 2010 6:08PM
Funny, I thought his name would've been Steam.
brian May 26th 2010 4:12PM
Ragnalon, Lord of Firewater?
Blondies May 27th 2010 3:25AM
Immanuel Kant was a real pissant
Who was very rarely stable.
Heidegger, Heidegger was a boozy beggar
Who could think you under the table.
David Hume could out-consume
Wilhelm Freidrich Hegel,
And Wittgenstein was a beery swine
Who was just as schloshed as Schlegel.
There's nothing Nietzsche couldn't teach ya'
'Bout the raising of the wrist.
SOCRATES, HIMSELF, WAS PERMANENTLY PISSED...
John Stuart Mill, of his own free will,
On half a pint of shandy was particularly ill.
Plato, they say, could stick it away;
Half a crate of whiskey every day.
Aristotle, Aristotle was a bugger for the bottle,
Hobbes was fond of his dram,
And Rene Descartes was a drunken fart: "I drink, therefore I am"
Yes, Socrates, himself, is particularly missed;
A lovely little thinker but a bugger when he's pissed!
TiM May 26th 2010 1:01PM
Can I just say I'm hoping for at least one epic krakken battle in Cata. I want to fight a krakken like the one described in the Troll legend. Something the size of a mountain range with leviathons swimming through it, massively powerful that me and 9 of my closest friends can slap around for loot once a week.
Jamie May 26th 2010 1:51PM
Unlike the Kraken in Guild Wars: Factions then...
http://wiki.guildwars.com/wiki/Kraken
Pat May 27th 2010 12:01AM
I'd love somthing of that size.. Hell why not just re create the Poseidon battle from God of War 3 but make it look more like a Kraken and um.. yeah, I can see it in my head but cannot describe it. >.<
Probly a nightmare to recreate in WoW but one can dream.
ladeezluvlarry71 May 26th 2010 1:39PM
"Water can hold any form, take any shape... overcome any obstacle."
It's a science lesson and a boss fight in one!
Kragragh May 26th 2010 1:56PM
My doctor once told me "Water always wins"
Blondies May 27th 2010 3:28AM
Bulbasaur uses whiplash against Water. It's super effective. Bulbasaur wins.
EbonyIvory May 27th 2010 5:36AM
Bulbasaur uses Vine whip against Water type. It's super effective! Bulbasaur wins.
fix'd
Pumabackup May 26th 2010 2:50PM
could murlocs be considered servants of Neptulon?? they seem to be on a world-wide crusade against just about everyone, and apparently came from the sea on azeroth.
also, Mutanus the Devourer in WC is a murloc who apparently comes from the emerald nightmare...could it be that the old gods are using their dominion over the elemental lords to gain access to the emerald dream?? since the emerald dream is the world in its "pure natural state" or something like that. if the murlocs do serve neptulon, that might explain why we see a murloc as what was corrupting Naralex in the emerald dream...
thoughts, anyone??
Al May 26th 2010 3:27PM
Still not getting how summoning Ahune, in another dimension, was meant to do anything to Ragnaros.
Mephron May 26th 2010 4:23PM
step 1: summon Ahune somewhere that Ragnaros can't look at easily
step 2: once he's fully summoned, send him through the Black Portal
step 3: hope that no level 80s notice and smack him around until the ice crystal has melted.
Al May 27th 2010 2:03AM
Okay, so why an Outland elemental and why in Outland?
It would be quicker and easier to summon him in Ulduman, especially since nobody ever goes there.
Kar May 26th 2010 4:36PM
"Neptulon's krakken servants (like the Lurker Below)..."
I know the mob model is called krakken, but the creatures described in the troll legend seem to be something else entirely. The beings who attacked I'lalai seem to be giagantic water elementals, as "jungles of kelp swayed through their limbs, and leviathans swam through bodies." Indeed I think leviathan is another name for lurker-type sea monsters - so these things had giant monsters swimming inside them like a fishbowl!
Pwnzoar May 27th 2010 5:32AM
That has the potential to be an epic boss fight. The giant krakken thing stalls for time by chucking a bunch of leviathans at the group and they're each a boss and you've got to kill them. There's four of them. And then finally the Krakken stops stalling and attacks the raid. Or something like that. Maybe all five of them at once.
Mallek May 26th 2010 11:37PM
So if voidwalkers are the elemental representation of shadow.....
Would that technically make the Naaru Light Elementals?
Bepo May 27th 2010 10:31PM
I thought it was established that wizards can't control water elementals, they just infuse and enchant water with magic to give it life. So mage Water Elementals aren't really elementals, more like golems.