Know Your Lore: The Vrykul

They are giants sleeping in the earth. They are the children of Azeroth's formation, creations of the Titans, cursed by the malevolent power of the primordial Old Gods to decay from their once nigh immortal forms of iron and stone. They are the subjects of Ymirion, he who turned away from his gods the Titans themselves in the face of his people's degradation. And most of all, they are the forerunners of humanity in the Warcraft setting.
The origins of the vrykul we see throughout Northrend are relatively simple, and yet remarkably complicated for that. Each Vrykul now alive is either a semi constructed being made in the creation forges of Ulduar (when you enter Ulduar's Halls of Lightning you can even see an army of Iron Vrykul waiting to be 'awakened' as it were) or is descended from one so created in the distant past, when the Titan Watchers were set to guard the defeated Yogg-Saron in his prison city of Ulduar itself after the discover of the Curse of Flesh. Alongside the Aesir and Vanir giants (including giants like the Sons of Hodir) and the various Earthen and Mechagnomes, the vrykul served the Watchers of Ulduar for untold millennia until the Prime Designate Loken succumbed to corruption and became a slave of Yogg-Saron.
During the Tribunal of Ages encounter, the history of Azeroth is outlined from the Titan point of view. We learn that after the defeat of the Old Gods but at some indeterminate point before the rise of races like the night elves or trolls, Loken either directly or indirectly instigates a war between the various creations of the Titans that spans the globe, and uses this war to place the majority of 'seed races' (ie those created by the Titans, including vrykul) into stasis.
The Tribunal of Ages- Kaddrak yells: Correct. Creators neutralized parasitic threat and contained it within the host. Forge of Wills and other systems were instituted to create new Earthen. Safeguards were implemented and protectors were appointed.
- Brann Bronzebeard yells: What protectors?
- Kaddrak yells: Designations: Aesir and Vanir or in common nomenclator Storm and Earth Giants. Sentinel Loken designated supreme. Dragon Aspects appointed to monitor evolution of Azeroth.
- Brann Bronzebeard yells: Aesir and Vanir. Okay. So the Forge of Wills started to make new Earthen. But what happened to the old ones?
- Marnak yells: Additional background is relevant to your query. Following global combat between-
- Brann Bronzebeard yells: Hold everything! The Aesir and Vanir went to war? Why?
- Marnak yells: Unknown. Data suggests that impetus for global combat originated with prime designate Loken who neutralized all remaining Aesir and Vanir affecting termination of conflict. Prime designate Loken then initiated stasis of several seed races including Earthen, Giant and Vrykul at designated holding facilities.
It's interesting that even the Tribunal doesn't know why the Aesir and Vanir giants went to war. It clearly suited Loken's purposes for them to do so: perhaps it's tied into the means by which Loken managed to overwhelm the other watchers (save Thorim, who would brood atop his temple for eons, and Tyr, who is at present still unknown) and gained sole control of Ulduar, and thus free to plot his new master's freedom.
This much is clear. Alongside the Aesir and Vanir giants, the earthen and the mechagnomes, the vrykul were created by the titans, affected by the Curse of Flesh, and eventually involved in a planet spanning conflict at the manipulation of Loken that led to the majority of their kind being placed in stasis in various 'holding facilities'. It's possible that Gjalerbron was one such holding facility or had its origins there, as when adventurers from the Alliance or Horde go there they can find many vrykul in a state of suspension that they can either be awakened from or killed in. Similarly, Icecrown Glacier's Halls of the Ancestors also holds many vrykul in a kind of stasis.
At some point after this war, the vrykul living in Howling Fjord led by King Ymiron (known as the Dragonflayer Clan) were either awakened from this state or managed to avoid it to lesser or greater degree. While these vrykul were somewhat isolated from their fellows (the Dragonflayers have settlements in both the Grizzly Hills and Howling Fjord and seem to have either subjugated or allied with the Winterskorn tribe, also in Howling Fjord) they, too, ultimately suffered from the degenerative effects of the curse of flesh.
The quest Echo of Ymirion shows two vrykul parents with a child that to them seems hideously deformed, weak and ugly, and far too puny to ever be a vrykul, and players can watch their decision to defy the edict of King Ymirion and refusal to put their child to death. Instead, they choose to hide their deformed offspring somewhere where it can grow to adulthood safely. Later in the quest Anguish of Nifflevar, players watch as Ymirion turns his back on the Titans, believing the curse of flesh to come from them and not the Old Gods at all. (He doesn't actually even mention the Old Gods, which makes me wonder if this was all part of how Loken got the various creations of the Titans to make war in the first place, by convincing those cursed by the Old Gods that it was instead the Titans who had so cursed them.)
Anguish of NifflevarKing Ymiron yells: Vrykul, your king implores you to listen!
King Ymiron yells: The gods have abandoned us!
King Ymiron yells: Even now, in our darkest hour, they mock us!
King Ymiron yells: Where are the titans in our time of greatest need? Our women birth abberations - disfigured runts unable to even stand on their own! Weak and ugly... Useless...
King Ymiron yells: Ymiron has toiled. Long have I sat upon my throne and thought hard of our plight. There is only one answer... one reason...
King Ymiron yells: For who but the titans themselves could bestow such a curse? What could have such power?
King Ymiron yells: And the answer is nothing... For it is the titans that have cursed us!
King Ymiron yells: On this day all Vrykul will shed their old beliefs! We denounce our old gods! All Vrykul will pledge their allegiance to Ymiron! Ymiron will protect our noble race!
King Ymiron yells: And now my first decree upon the Vrykul! All malformed infants born of Vrykul mother and father are to be destroyed upon birth! Our blood must remain pure always! Those found in violation of Ymiron's decree will be taken to Gjalerbron for execution!
King Ymiron yells: The gods have abandoned us!
King Ymiron yells: Even now, in our darkest hour, they mock us!
King Ymiron yells: Where are the titans in our time of greatest need? Our women birth abberations - disfigured runts unable to even stand on their own! Weak and ugly... Useless...
King Ymiron yells: Ymiron has toiled. Long have I sat upon my throne and thought hard of our plight. There is only one answer... one reason...
King Ymiron yells: For who but the titans themselves could bestow such a curse? What could have such power?
King Ymiron yells: And the answer is nothing... For it is the titans that have cursed us!
King Ymiron yells: On this day all Vrykul will shed their old beliefs! We denounce our old gods! All Vrykul will pledge their allegiance to Ymiron! Ymiron will protect our noble race!
King Ymiron yells: And now my first decree upon the Vrykul! All malformed infants born of Vrykul mother and father are to be destroyed upon birth! Our blood must remain pure always! Those found in violation of Ymiron's decree will be taken to Gjalerbron for execution!
So imagine you are one of the vrykul who has sired or given birth to one of these disfigured runts. If you don't kill your child, you yourself will be put to death in Gjalerbron alongside the slumbering bodies of your own people. What do you do?
We don't really know, but from what Thorallius the Wise and the players themselves discover, some vrykul clearly decided to save their stunted, half grown children and hide them somewhere their own people couldn't find them. It is these vrykul who are somehow the ancestors of humanity, possibly the direct ancestors of the Arathor clans that became the first human nation long after the Sundering.
We also know that the vrykul returned to stasis perhaps out of desperation to prevent the curse from further ravaging them, and that many of them, their faith in the Titans lost, eventually found a new god to follow. What's interesting in looking at how the vrykul have come to serve the Lich King is how terrified they are of what they see as the ravaging change from their primordial roots as a seed race of Titan origin through the curse of flesh to a state like that of the very humans who produced Arthas Menethil in the first place. How willing they are to let the Lich King test them, and how eager they are to stop any possibility of their race changing from what it is now by the method of being frozen forever in undeath.
We as yet don't really know how the Kvaldir, or sea vrykul, fit into this. We discussed them when talking about water elementals since they seem to have a connection to Neptulon and his kraken minions, which means that they might have turned to the elementals who once served the Old Gods in a similar way, forsaking the Titans for anyone who might be able to prevent them from turning into humans. (Kvaldir are so divorced from fleshly existence that killing one causes it to explode into seaweed and water.) It's also unclear how different the frost vrykul are from their more fleshy relatives, but Skadi serves King Ymirion in Utgarde Pinnacle so there's at least some connection through the Lich King. Yet some still serve the Titans... Thorim is still an object of veneration by the Hyldnr vrykul, for instance, and it appears new vrykul untouched by the curse were churned out by Loken in Ulduar into recent times. Arthas' vrykul can be found in the massive Utgard complex, in Gjalerbron, and throughout Jotunheim on the glacier. They also infest the wing of the Icecrown Citadel where Dreamwalker is kept prisoner.
There's a lot more yet to learn about the ancestors of humanity... how did they get from Northrend to the Eastern Kingdoms? How long ago did they leave? How many still sleep in stasis below the surface of the earth, and do they just lurk in Northrend or could they be found elsewhere?
Filed under: Lore, Know your Lore
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 3)
Fr0styz Jun 16th 2010 4:51PM
Northrend, Kalimdor, and Northrend used to be the same continent until the sundering.
Mike Jun 16th 2010 4:54PM
I think you mean Northrend, Kalimdor, and the collection of continents known as the Eastern Kingdoms used to be the same continent :)
daan.leijen Jun 16th 2010 5:28PM
Mike, the Eastern Kingdoms IS a continent. Just look at the map. Kezan & the Lost Isles were also part of the continent before the Sundering. I think all landmass on Azeroth was (well, maybe not GM isle :P).
Koleckai Jun 17th 2010 5:36PM
The Eastern Kingdoms is actually three small continents in close proximity. Azeroth (Around Stormwind), Khaz Modan (Dwarven Areas), and Lordaeron (Northern areas).
Eldoron Jun 16th 2010 4:58PM
This is silly.... Vrykuls probably didn't know at all about Old Gods, so no wonder they thought that the curse came from the Titans, their "gods". It's nothing new that the government holds info back from the population ;)
Malkil Jun 16th 2010 5:17PM
Wow... Even though I had read the lore of this race many times over, this puts it in a whole new light.
While their recent actions are undoubtedly evil, it makes sense that this would stem from fear and self preservation. One can almost be sympathetic with their plight.
Prior to reading this article and seeing the pieces of lore assembled together, I had always viewed them as a race that was more interested in power than retaining themselves.
Matt J Jun 16th 2010 5:23PM
While you indicated that Tyr's fate is currently unknown it has been strongly hinted that he was transformed into General Vezax under Yogg-Saron's Corruption
"What makes you think that Tyr doesn't have a room? Or that you haven't actually fought him? Old Gods and their corruption... I'm just sayin... " --Valnoth
http://forums.worldofwarcraft.com/thread.html?topicId=19595382623&sid=1
(I really hope this isn't a double post)
holyhaberdashery Jun 16th 2010 5:24PM
I like to pronounce Vrykul, very cool. Probably the coolest race introduced thus far.
Etreya Jun 16th 2010 5:26PM
Take into account that the curse of flesh could have affected the Vrykul in several different ways much like the Earthen who could 'mutate' into either Dwarves or Troggs.
I think that the curse of flesh could very well have destabalized the DNA (or Matrix as the Disks of Norgannon would no doubt call it) after it had already made them fleshy, thus leading to extremely rapid 'evolution' and the birth of humans to Vrykul parents.
Draelan Jun 16th 2010 6:24PM
Ah, this is true. I'd actually forgotten about the Troggs relation to the dwarves. It does make sense.
staffan.johansson Jun 16th 2010 5:30PM
I figured that the Vrykul/human ancestors simply walked from Northrend to current Lordaeron. The visions are said to take place about 15,000 years ago, at which time Azeroth only had the one continent, Kalimdor. The Great Sundering happened some 5,000 years after that.
Bobson Jun 16th 2010 5:45PM
I'm curious where the animalistic races came from. Tauren have a theory, but wolvar, murlocs, and tuskaar I haven't heard anything about.
staffan.johansson Jun 16th 2010 7:01PM
There *are* rather a lot of animalistic races, aren't there? Tauren, Quillboars, Centaurs (OK, these have an official explanation), Furbolgs, Gnolls, Makrura, Tuskarr, Wolvar, Kobolds, Murlocs, Harpies, and Pandaren. I'm thinking maybe the Titans (or someone else) did a little experimenting with uplifting animals and creating humanoids out of them.
Wuvlycuddles Jun 16th 2010 5:51PM
I have always wondered about the Kvaldir, as no real explaination has ever been given about their origins (i hear they will return in cataclysm so fingers crossed for more info soon!!), but its my theory that some of these Stasis Chambers like Gjalerbron just happened to be submerged when the sundering hit, so perhaps they just awoke to discover they have been seeweedified and underwater?
Hairfish Jun 17th 2010 2:08AM
Good theory. That might also explain a bit why the blue sea-giants stomping all over the shores of the lower continents look so much like Vrykul.
Ilmyrn Jun 16th 2010 6:05PM
I was under the impression that the stasis chambers we see here and there with sleeping Vyrkul were built by them as 'arks' to ride out the Sundering in, and from which they'd only just recently started awakening. That's why Utgarde is falling apart: They've only just begun to fix 10,000 years worth of deglect,a nd why there are so many still hibernating.
Boobah Jun 16th 2010 8:40PM
It was my understanding that the hibernation crypts were a last-ditch stall tactic to avoid what they would consider degenerating into humans. With the Lich King's undeath a way to avoid the need for children, no worries about degenerating, and the worthy are uplifted to power (and undeath) while the unworthy get to be zombies serving the others.
But you can't separate the worthy and unworthy while they're in stasis, so you have to wake them up, test them, and only then convert them into the undead soldiers the Lich King is after. So the vrykul are being woken up, because undeath is the 'cure' they'd been looking for; the horse has finally begun to sing.
Of course, undeath is only a stopgap, too, since eventually they'll all be destroyed. But eventually can be a long time...
wdm+hall Jun 16th 2010 8:35PM
OMFG I LOVE THIS GAME!
Another great Know Your Lore guys! Keep it up!
Sharvis Jun 16th 2010 8:57PM
I hope we see more Vrykul in Cataclysm throughout Azeroth. Fortunately we know we'll at least see Sea Vrykul in Vashj'ir, according to the preview of the zone. The lore for the race could use some expanding, but I have to admit I didn't give it much thought until reading this. It's why I like reading the KYL articles since it refreshes my memory from reading the quest texts from so long ago and makes connections I'd never have made myself. I glazed over a bit with the HoS Muradin event since I'm always in a group for that and focusing on other things.
Also, the artwork displayed in the article is great. It makes me want to see more friendly Vrykul to interact with.
Turlagh Jun 16th 2010 8:59PM
Is Gretta a Vyrkul?
If so I love Vyrkul.
Gretta gave me a grundgy white bear.