
World of Warcraft: Morning Blade
About This Novel
"Arthas, I will never allow you to tarnish this sacred land and destroy my country!" Treel Sunstrider clenched the Flamestrike in his right hand and held the Phoenix Banner in his left hand. He stood on the heights of the Sunwell and angrily rebuked the fallen prince Arthas Menethil. Bloody holy light radiated from Telel Sunstrider's body, and the rage of revenge turned into wings and appeared on his back.
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 6d ago
I can only say that the early writing was too forced. Is this just a normal person who has never played World of Warcraft?
Compared with the previous book, it seems that there is really no motivation to read it. The description of the war is simply like a child's play house. The previous book also had a battle loss ratio of 1:1. This book has not learned its lesson. The population determines how to fight. If ten or twenty thousand people die in one fell swoop, it will take hundreds of years to replenish the population. Isn't this funny?
Not so good
The protagonist is not a time traveler and has no memory but belongs to a different kind of aboriginal people. How can one person resist the Scourge? Could it be that in the end the high elves were wiped out by 80% of the population? Finally become a transparent race?
Come on^0^~, author
World of Warcraft population problem
In the World of Warcraft setting, the total population of high elves peaked at less than one million, and after three wars there were only about 100,000 left. The advantage of high elves was their high racial talent. Almost all adult elves had an army of 70,000 to 80,000. The total human population is unknown, but the orcs grew to more than 800,000 people during the Cataclysm (30 years after crossing eastward to Kalimdor). Then Ogg gave away 300,000, and it took another 20 years to arrive in Azeroth (and the Mag'har orcs came from Draenor). During this period, the main reason why the tribe lost power was that the orcs had insufficient population and insufficient strength. For example, when the human Stormwind City was founded, it only had a population of hundreds of thousands, but it still suffered constant losses during the period. It was the main force on the front line in every war, so humans can firmly hold the position of the leader of the alliance.
reminder
I've been following up on updates, but why haven't they been updated for a month? If this book is out of date, please let me know.
Rating
Community(0)
Official(5)Scraped 6d ago
I can only say that the early writing was too forced. Is this just a normal person who has never played World of Warcraft?
Compared with the previous book, it seems that there is really no motivation to read it. The description of the war is simply like a child's play house. The previous book also had a battle loss ratio of 1:1. This book has not learned its lesson. The population determines how to fight. If ten or twenty thousand people die in one fell swoop, it will take hundreds of years to replenish the population. Isn't this funny?
Not so good
The protagonist is not a time traveler and has no memory but belongs to a different kind of aboriginal people. How can one person resist the Scourge? Could it be that in the end the high elves were wiped out by 80% of the population? Finally become a transparent race?
Come on^0^~, author
World of Warcraft population problem
In the World of Warcraft setting, the total population of high elves peaked at less than one million, and after three wars there were only about 100,000 left. The advantage of high elves was their high racial talent. Almost all adult elves had an army of 70,000 to 80,000. The total human population is unknown, but the orcs grew to more than 800,000 people during the Cataclysm (30 years after crossing eastward to Kalimdor). Then Ogg gave away 300,000, and it took another 20 years to arrive in Azeroth (and the Mag'har orcs came from Draenor). During this period, the main reason why the tribe lost power was that the orcs had insufficient population and insufficient strength. For example, when the human Stormwind City was founded, it only had a population of hundreds of thousands, but it still suffered constant losses during the period. It was the main force on the front line in every war, so humans can firmly hold the position of the leader of the alliance.
reminder
I've been following up on updates, but why haven't they been updated for a month? If this book is out of date, please let me know.









