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Sylvanas' Endgame, Old Gods, and the Faction War
PTR
Pubblicato
26/04/2019 alle 08:35
da
perculia
Endgame spoilers! In the latest PTR build for patch 8.2, Sylvanas talks about her endgame and a hidden purpose behind the continued escalation of the faction war. With
Rise of Azshara
bringing the Old God N'Zoth to the forefront of the story, you would think Sylvanas would take a back seat to more important threats, but the cunning Banshee Queen is always planning something. How will Sylvanas' story tie in with Azshara and N'Zoth, where do her true allegiances lie, and what schemes does she still have in store? We're taking a look at hints in the 8.2 broadcast text to summarize the end of the Azshara fight and where the story could go next to satisfy Sylvanas' endgame plan.
This article contains Patch 8.2 spoilers as well as speculation.
End of the Azshara Fight
In
Azshara's Eternal Palace
, it's revealed that Azshara has been working to free N'Zoth all along, luring us to her palace so our Azerite will weaken the Titan chains imprisoning N'Zoth. After we're shipwrecked on Nazjatar, Azshara shows us a vision of N'Zoth rising from the depths, encouraging us to focus on trapping N'Zoth:
Thalyssra
: There is... a presence here. Tendrils strangling my mind...
Herald of N'Zoth
: The locks weaken. The world screams.
Herald of N'Zoth
: N'Zoth rises once more.
Shandris
: Out there... titan pillars. And chains descending into darkness...
Thalyssra
: Azshara wants us to see this. Why? Surely she knows we would never let that monster free!
Shandris
: There is no time to warn the others! We must end this, champions... now!
There's a rather large amount of
broadcast text from Nazjatar
, documenting the transformation of Ashvane, history of Shandris and Thalyssra in Zin-Azshari, reclaiming the Tidestone, and defeating earlier bosses... but in today's article, we're interested in the reveal of Azshara's plan - setting up the final boss of
Battle for Azeroth
.
We learn a great deal during the Azshara encounter itself; in
Intermission Three: Darkness Rises
of the Azshara encounter, Azshara "reveals her true plans and exposes the players' folly." Broadcast text suggests that in this phase we learn that empowering the Heart of Azeroth was a part of Azshara's plan all along, using Magni as an unwitting pawn:
Azshara
: You see the truth now, don't you, heroes? Every move you've made has been according to my will.
Azshara
: That lumbering dwarf believed you could save Azeroth by empowering your shiny little Heart. The gift of a sleeping titan.
Azshara
: Yes, a titan's heart was exactly what was needed. Not to heal the world... but to shatter the prison of a god.
Azshara
: The ritual nears completion. The Black Empire rises... and the world awaits its true queen.
Jaina
: There will be no coronation this day.
With this reveal, many of Il'gynoth's prophecies fall into place, which we previously documented in
The Emerald Dream and Il'gynoth's Whispers in Rise of Azshara (Spoilers)
.
In
Stage 4: This Palace Is a Prison
, Jaina and Thalyssra appear to trap Azshara in place, with the description "Unable to leave, Azshara turns her full force upon the raid. Players must contend with Azshara while attempting to keep the Titan Console under control."
This leads to more broadcast text while Azshara is imprisoned:
Jaina
: Thalyssra, aid me! Together we can hold her here!
Thalyssra
: Now you will know what it means to be trapped, Azshara!
Azshara
: Azshara: I am Azshara! I was destined to rule! No force can bind me!
Shandris
: Once again your empire crumbles, Azshara. Your master will be disappointed by this failure.
Jaina
: She wanted us divided. Fighting each other kept us distracted from the true threat.
Lor'themar
: Azshara wasn't the only one manipulating us. I should have seen it sooner.
Azshara
: You caught me off guard. Fair enough. But you are as trapped here as I. This need not be the end... for any of us.
Thalyssra
: Stars save us... Azshara is drawing upon the Heart of Azeroth! Feeding its energies into her ritual!
Unfortunately, while Azshara may be imprisoned, our Azerite has overloaded the Titan Consoles, weakening the chains that hold N'Zoth:
Titan Console
Overload
:
The titan console is bursting with Azerite energy. If players don't unleash the energy within until cancelled. all the energy will be unleashed at the same time.
Each time a player releases a charge of energy, a pulse of Spellstrike energy is unleashed on the raid and one additional, random effect occurs.
Controlled Release
:
You push the button, releasing a controlled burst of energy from the Titan console and unleashing an extra, unknown effect.
Controlled Burst
:
The console releases a burst of Azerite energy, inflicting 40 Spellstrike damage to the entire raid.
Essence of Azeroth
:
The titan console arcs pure Azerite energy into a random player. The energy causes the player to die after 40 sec. but they are greatly empowered until their death.
System Shock
:
A massive blast of Azerite energies course through you, inflicting 100 Spellstrike damage over 10 sec.
Short Circuit
:
The console goes haywire and fires off bolts of energy that cause a nearby ancient ward to lose power.
Massive Energy Spike
:
The console releases all remaining charges simultaneously.
At the Rise of Azshara feedback event,
T&E reported
that Game Director Ion Hazzikostas said that upon completing the Azshara encounter, it should be obvious who the final boss is. With N'Zoth freed, it's likely we'll be fighting the Old God in Patch 8.3. You'd think this would be enough to convince the factions to once again set aside their differences and face a common enemy, but the War Campaign and Sylvanas' story continue to escalate with no resolution in sight.
Faction Allegiances and Return of Thrall
At first glance, it looks like we're headed toward another Siege of Orgrimmar. Patch 8.2 opens with members of both factions
helping Baine Bloodhoof escape execution
at the hands of Sylvanas, leaving Saurfang and Thrall to plan a rebellion similar to Vol'jin's in
Mists of Pandaria
. Jaina and Lor'themar work together in Nazjatar, putting their differences aside in order to defeat Azshara, much in the same way members of the Alliance and Horde banded together in Ahn'Qiraj and Ulduar to defeat Old Gods.
With N'Zoth's chains broken, the future looks grim. Jaina and Lor'themar have one final conversation about the importance of working together when the time comes to inevitably face the Old God.
Lor'themar
: Our victory rings hollow. Azshara's master will rise. Nothing can stop that now.
Jaina
: For all her lies, Priscilla Ashvane spoke one truth. The war between the Alliance and Horde has kept us distracted. Divided, we have no hope against N'Zoth.
Lor'themar
: We may have found common cause here in Nazjatar, but the battle still rages beyond these waters. So long as Sylvanas holds Orgrimmar, there can be no lasting peace.
Jaina
: The war needs to end, Lor'themar. You know this to be true.
Lor'themar
: I had hoped that reason would prevail. But the time has come to finish this.
Lor'themar
: I will tell my people what transpired here. Of how Azshara fell because we stood together. Of the threat rising from the depths, and all that is at stake if we should fail.
Lor'themar
: Then I will take my place beside Saurfang and Thrall, and pray that the sin'dorei stand with me.
If Lor'themar is now also against Sylvanas, the leader who welcomed the Sin'dorei into the Horde in the first place, we appear to be heading toward a dramatic confrontation as most of the faction leaders are arrayed Sylvanas. Except, Sylvanas appears to
want
that - recent broadcast text indicates that Sylvanas expected us to free Baine, and even more shockingly, specifically instructed the Sunreavers to put up a fight before
letting
us escape.
Old Broadcast Text
: Saurfang, Thrall, the Alliance... it is vexing to know our quarry escaped. But we must trust in the warchief's plan.
New Broadcast Text
: Saurfang, Thrall, the Alliance... it is vexing to allow our quarry to believe they escaped us. But we must trust in the warchief's plan.
Why would Sylvanas want us to escape? A few weeks ago, we discuss her increasing parallels to Arthas in
A Warbringer for Every Patch: Plot Twists for Azshara and Sylvanas
, and speculate she may want to gather the heroes of Azeroth in one place so that she can kill and raise them into her service:
With the ability to raise Undead of all races, regardless of free will, the parallels to the Lich King are increasing. Sylvanas even has raised Delaryn, the young Night Elf determined to save her homeland, in a ghastly scene reminiscent of Sylvanas own death and revival at the hands of Arthas during the fall of Silvermoon. Her acquisition of the Blade of the Black Empire continues these similarities - will this be Sylvanas' Frostmourne? There's a strong indication that we could end up in the Shadowlands this expansion; it's been referenced many times by Old Gods, the current Lich King, Vol'jin, and Bwonsamdi himself are inhabitants of that land of the dead. Could that be a part of our eventual confrontation with Sylvanas? Could she try to pull a Lich King, intending to kill the heroes of Azeroth in order to raise us as unwilling champions bound to her service?
We also learned in a
Polygon interview
that unlike Garrosh at the end of Siege of Orgrimmar, Sylvanas' story will not end with her in chains. What better way to escape that fate than by imprisoning the characters that want to defeat her first?
Hazzikostas is aware of the parallels to Garrosh’s story, and he says that the Horde is too.
“There are a couple of references here and there,” he says. “There are more coming. Members of the Horde leadership will remember going down dark paths before.”
He also notes that Garrosh’s motives were different; they were an attempt to restore a long lost vision for the Horde at the expense of everything else. Sylvanas’ goals are still unclear, but Hazzikostas notes that “There will not be a trial where she is in chains. Sylvanas is not a character who would find herself in that situation ... ever.
The return of Thrall, heralded with a new model in the 8.2 datamining, may lead to wishful thinking that he'll once again lead the Horde, returning to his place as the rightful Warchief. He disappeared from the story at the start of Legion, forsaking the Doomhammer, likely clouded by guilt over appointing Garrosh as Warchief, subsequent carnage in Mists of Pandaria, and duel to the death in Warlords. A triumphant return, where he saves Baine and partners with Saurfang to reclaim control of the Horde and a return to the "Old Horde" values, would be a wildly indulgent and satisfying story. However, following Battle for Azeroth's pattern of subverting tropes...what if Thrall
does
gain the support of the people through the rebellion, but it doesn't matter? Should Sylvanas have a plan that ends in her avoiding imprisonment, following her penchant for breaking rules and traditions, the rebellion led by Thrall and Saurfang could be for naught.
Sylvanas' Recent Actions
While Sylvanas' motives are still unclear, we can examine what we
do
know she wants.
First, she orchestrated an elaborate campaign, always one step ahead, to determine which players are loyal to her. She has an uncanny ability to predict the future, though she's still able to be surprised, such as when Saurfang spared Malfurion and Delaryn spoke of hope in
A Good War
. As part of her plans, she let
Baine return Derek Proudmoore
to his sister Jaina in order to build trust between the faction leaders, and then
publicly imprisoned Baine
in full view of both the Horde leadership and Alliance spies. We still don't know if Derek is a sleeper agent of Sylvanas, but there are certainly more twists in store as Sylvanas imprisoning Baine in Orgrimmar drives the Alliance and Horde closer. His subsequent escape comes with yet another twist - we think she predicted our arrival and set an ambush, which is impressive enough, but in reality, she
wanted us to escape
and believe we successfully thwarted her. The Alliance and Horde coming together against her appears to be exactly what she wants to happen.
Following the Crucible of Storms raid, we retrieve the Blade of the Black Empire and
bring it to Sylvanas
. She then utters a few ominous lines which echo Old God whispers.
Lady Sylvanas Windrunner
: The Alliance believes that by striking down Rastakhan and decimating the Zandalari fleet, they have broken us. That the Horde will soon crumble.
Lady Sylvanas Windrunner
: Fools. The boy-king has lied to himself and his people. He hasn't the faintest inkling of what he's truly up against.
Lady Sylvanas Windrunner
: War is a living thing. It writhes, it grows, twisting and turning until its final form is revealed.
Lady Sylvanas Windrunner
: This war is about to shift yet again. And it will be this blade that guides our way to victory.
With blade in hand, Sylvanas instructs Nathanos to take the Horde fleet to Nazjatar, where she predicts heavy casualties for both factions.
Lady Sylvanas Windrunner
: Nathanos. The next phase of our campaign is at hand.
Lady Sylvanas Windrunner
: Sail out with what remains of our fleet. The blade will guide you to the rendezvous.
Lady Sylvanas Windrunner
: Casualties on both sides will be substantial. Consider this an opportunity to weed out the disloyal.
Lady Sylvanas Windrunner
: The threads we have woven with such care will soon be drawn together. The war is serving its purpose. Stay focused on the endgame. You know what is to come.
Lady Sylvanas Windrunner
: We have been through so much together, you and I. Trust in me, as I have ever trusted in you.
Again we see her eerie prescience at work, knowing not only that something is out there, but that the rendezvous will result in a large loss of life, and it's difficult not to wonder why she would take that risk after the Horde's losses at Dazar'alor. Is she weeding out the disloyal, or simply the undesirable? Perhaps it is the dagger speaking to her, but with Xal'atath no longer inhabiting it, who's whispers are they?
Nathanos instructs players to sail to Nazjatar and to go along with everyone's plans (e.g. defeating Azshara), until Sylvanas has need of us once again:
Nathanos
: Saurfang, Thrall, the Alliance... it is vexing to allow our quarry to believe they escaped us. But we must trust in the warchief's plan.
Nathanos
: Soon your loyalty will face an even greater test. I do hope you prove worthy of the Dark Lady's favor.
Nathanos
: I have been recalled to Orgrimmar. Remain in Nazjatar. Keep playing along with these traitorous vipers... until you are summoned.
Nathanos
: You're back on your feet. Good. Your survival is key to the Dark Lady's plans.
Nathanos
: Look around, $p. The vaunted Alliance fleet lies in ruins. Perfect.
Facing Azshara doesn't seem to worry Nathanos or Sylvanas. If she wants to weed out the disloyal, why would she them escape Orgrimmar, knowing it would drive the Alliance and Horde together, and then bring her remaining forces to Nazjatar where they'll face further loss? Is Sylvanas that good at predicting all of these moves as well as their outcomes?
Sylvanas' Endgame
This brings us to the most-important line from the recent broadcast text:
"The threads we have woven with such care will soon be drawn together. The war is serving its purpose. Stay focused on the endgame. You know what is to come."
Sylvanas' motivations are still murky, but it's clear there's more than just the faction war at stake - her description of weaving threads together also reminds us of the imagery surrounding the Circle of Stars nearing completion, a mystery revealed at the end of the Azshara encounter.
Sylvanas has previously made it clear that her goal is to master death. Since the very start of
Battle for Azeroth
, we've seen scattered hints that the faction war is a front for a deeper purpose; here are a few of those hints from
A Good War
:
Perhaps he would find a glorious death on the battlefield before he ever had to face a choice that would destroy him.
Or maybe the old orc will surprise me, she thought. Maybe he will face the world as it is and choose to fight onwards at my side. If he doesn’t well…That can wait.
Elune had intervened. Perhaps she had even stayed Saurfang’s killing blow. And she wouldn’t be the only force beyond the Alliance to oppose Sylvanas’ true objective.
Sylvanas’s anger grew cold.
She had known this would happen. It had simply come sooner than expected. That was all.
Throughout the pre-patch, Sylvanas is irked by the living. She sarcastically refers to them when threatening Baine at the Siege of Lordaeron, threatening to raise Saurfang as a corpse, and is visibly upset when Delaryn calls her an enemy of the living. In the
Warbringers: Sylvanas
short, we see how she feels that being a hero as a Ranger-General did nothing - the people she tried to save died, her kingdom fell, and most of her old allies rejected her the newly-formed Forsaken afterward. In
Three Sisters
, we learn that she planned to kill her sisters, and although she lets them go, she proclaims that they will eventually serve her in death. Sylvanas seems to feel more passion for undeath than for the Horde, and it could be that her true goal is simply to defeat life itself, in order to ensure both her immortality and the survival of the Forsaken.
Throughout
Battle for Azeroth
, Sylvanas hasn't seemed to particularly care that leaders are abandoning her, even staunch allies like Lor'themar - instead she almost relishes it. What if alienating everyone, so they join forces in order to fight Sylvanas as one, is part of her plan? Again, we see the parallels to the Lich King, who nearly succeeded in turning the world's greatest champions to his service. Note the following line from
Diario dei Sogni di Ogmot
, which aptly describes how we follow her like sheep:
Ogmot sees lady wrapped in dark swirlies. She leads herd of blind sheep.
Da sheepies follow her everplace she go. Do everthin she say. Never doubt lady.
She guide dem over tall cliff! SPLAT SPLAT SPLAT! Stupid sheepies!
Da crows get fat eatin da sheepflesh. Da lady laugh as crows eat!
Time is also running out for Sylvanas, as her remaining Val'kyr dwindle with the
loss of Brynja in 8.1
. Should any more Val'kyr fall in battle, she could be prevented from resurrecting again, which may force her to desperate measures... such as unleashing her blight on everyone, the loyal and rebellious alike. In recent patches we've seen that Sylvanas has begun to resurrect non-human races, and the newly risen have questionable free will. Sylvanas needs three Val'kyr to resurrect her, and if she loses that failsafe, she'll do whatever it takes not to avoid eternal torment in the Shadowlands. We've heard a few times that
Horde player choice
will
matter
, so perhaps those who side with Sylvanas will be spared her wrath should she unleash something horrible.
There's also the mystery of Sylvanas' pact with Helya, teased in Stormheim questing in Legion. We thought Helya died at the end of Trial of Valor, but the quest
Anello delle Scogliere
confirms she is still alive, as you cannot kill death. And we all know that Sylvanas wants to master death...so their pact could still be active.
Eye of Corruption - N'Zoth vs Sylvanas
While one could think that Sylvanas is a pawn of N'Zoth, controlling her through the Blade of the Black Empire and directly referencing the whispers of
Il'gynoth
, it's likely Sylvanas doesn't see it that way. She has always refused to be a puppet, and it's at least equally likely that she wants to
use
the Old Gods in her schemes, as long as they longer suit her purposes. Before the patch 8.2 PTR, we speculated that N'Zoth and Azshara might be at odds, using each other for their independent agendas, and while this no longer appears likely due to Azshara's efforts to free N'Zoth and bring back the Black Empire, a similar dynamic could still occur between N'Zoth and Sylvanas. N'Zoth guides the blade to Sylvanas, hoping her destruction is the catalyst needed to return the Black Empire, while Sylvanas uses Azerite and the power of the Old Gods to further her own agenda. In
Legion
, Sylvanas tried to trap Eyir in a lantern for similar purposes, and now she may decide to use the Blade of the Black Empire in a similar manner - trapping the spirit of an Old God.
Some
datamined dialogue
from the "Eye of the Corruptor" reminds us that the forces of the Void and Old Gods dislike Sylvanas:
Give in. Accept the embrace. Listen.
Listen. Listen. Listen. LISTEN.
The queen threatens the king. There is no way to win. Listen.
The undrowned will join the chorus. Listen to it.
Listen. Open the gate. Step into the abyss. Complete the circle.
You were right to doubt them.
Listen. She is a threat. Kill her. KILL HER.
Listen. You know this is the truth. It is but one of a thousand. You have only to listen.
Everywhere you look, the stars gaze back. You know their form already. You have but to listen.
In the comic
Three Sisters
, the voices of the Void demand Alleria kill Sylvanas:
This one is dangerous. She is a threat and must be ended. Beware this one, she seeks the death of all things...all possibilities. End her threat, murder her. Murder her, save yourself and murder her. Save the world and murder her.
She is a violation, she serves the true enemy. Kill her now kill her kill her now, remove her from this world and take from her what you need now now now.
This is nothing, you should have destroyed her. Now it is too late. You have sacrificed greatness for false feelings. They will leave you. You will watch as she claims them.
Sylvanas also expresses distaste for Alleria's alignment with the Void:
Sylvanas
: I had no choice regarding my fate, but you, sister..
Sylvanas
: You left your son. You left our brother.
Sylvanas
: You left us!
Sylvanas
: And now you return, a mere vessel for the void's power? You are but a shadow of Alleria...an abomination!
Alleria
: You call ME an abomination?
Sylvanas
: Are you not? Transformed--nay twisted--by a fallen naaru?
While Battle for Azeroth has had many plot twists, in this comic it seems clear that the forces of Undeath and Void hate each other. In the story
A Thousand Years of War
, it is Alleria who sees herself serving N'Zoth instead:
"The Light seeks one path and shuns all others as lies. The Shadow seeks every possible path and sees them all as truth."
More visions. Possible futures. She saw Xe'ra, the Mother of Light, declaring her a heretic and calling for her death. She saw her blood on Turalyon's sword. She saw Arator calling an army of paladins to hunt her down, only to fall with her arrows in his throat. She saw herself kneeling before the One Who Slumbers beneath Azeroth's waves. She saw herself killing it and taking its place, leading a throng of horrors to consume every nation.
Future Patches
Based on the early story hints in Patch 8.2, we're moving towards similar plot points from previous expansions - the Horde banding together against an unconventional Warchief, the Alliance and Horde putting differences aside to fight a greater threat. However, Sylvanas' behavior is a wildcard, which could spin these storylines in a new direction.
Assuming N'Zoth is the final boss of the expansion in Patch 8.3, and we won't retread the predictable path of banding together to fight the Old Gods, Sylvanas revealing her endgame motives in 8.2.5 could introduce additional wrinkles to the plot. What if we find ourselves collateral damage as part of Sylvanas' scheme to master death, too weakened to reliably fight N'Zoth even if we all work together? What if Saurfang's rebellion is successful with Thrall as Warchief, but it's ultimately meaningless as Sylvanas will not surrender through normal means?
Patch 8.2.5 is already introducing updated Worgen and Goblin models, which will generate a fair bit of hype. Both factions could receive new storylines capitalizing on their popularity, as Gallywix introduced Azerite to Sylvanas, and Genn has a long bitter history with Sylvanas. We could see 8.2.5 leading to a mini-raid where we confront Sylvanas and finally see how her plot will veer from the Siege of Orgrimmar.
We've
written before
that each major Patch of BFA so far focuses on a different Warbringer, which would lead to Sylvanas being the focus of the final patch of the expansion as we learn more about her motives. With a Sylvanas-centric plot, we'd hope to see payoff to the
choice of allegiance between Saurfang and Sylvanas
that Horde players made earlier in
Battle for Azeroth
, and possibly even a new type of Undead forged in the Light like
Calia Menethil
. While we used it as an
April Fools joke
, there's a strong case to be made that a new type of Undead could fit into the roster of playable races, represented by Derek Proudmoore and Calia Menethil; it would set up a nice parallel between Sylvanas' ability to raise the dead as Forsaken while her rival faction leader Anduin assists in bringing undead to the Light.
As the Horde leadership is divides further, we could also see a breakdown of the current factions, with fringe groups of Undead and Night Elves both. Should Patch 8.3 center on Sylvanas, the question of how to handle her controversial leadership would rise to the forefront. Perhaps we may even start to see similar dissent between Alliance leadership, hinted as a future plot point in the
Polygon interview
.
Alliance don’t have that same division in their ranks just yet, and there isn’t that same natural point of choice.
Patch 8.1, which focused on Jaina, saw the Horde leadership grow divided. Should the Sylvanas patch mirror Jaina's patch, the Alliance would then start to see internal conflict. We've previously gotten a minor divide in the Battle for Darkshore--Anduin focused on the military campaign in Dazar'alor, while Tyrande and Genn went to fight Darkshore. Should Anduin continue putting off assistance to Darkshore, the Night Elves and Worgen could further splinter--with the loss of Genn hitting Anduin hard. The Gnomes, lacking a leader with Mekkatorque in a coma, may also be restless, while Alleria, always a wildcard, could finally cross a line with her whispers, wrecking the delicate balance of peace.
We also know from
Il carceriere dei dannati
that the Frozen Throne is apparently a gateway between Azeroth and the Shadowlands, which could indicate some new story for Bolvar Fordragon (and his daughter, Taelia!). Neither of them like Sylvanas very much either, both opposed to Sylvanas' ambition and disruption of the balance between life and death, so this could be a part of eventual confrontation as one or the other try to oppose whatever plan she puts in motion. We could now be in a race against time to see what happens first--the Old Gods breaking free to fully corrupt the world, or Sylvanas hastening the death of Azeroth through continuous escalation of the faction conflict, harmful use of Azerite, and raising enemies into Undeath.
Another potential plot twist could occur in Icecrown, should we learn that Sylvanas' vision of Shadowlands as eternal hell in "
Edge of Night
" wasn't authentic. As her body is dashed upon the saronite in Icecrown Citadel, constructed from the blood of Yogg-Saron <God of Death>, perhaps the Old Gods meddled to deny her a peaceful death and sow chaos in Azeroth. Presenting her with a hellish vision of the afterlife, powered by the saronite of the Old Gods, would play into the idea that Sylvanas was tricked into leaving the afterlife, headed down a path of destruction on a mission to avoid hell at all costs. But Sylvanas could also be using the power of the Old Gods to benefit her quest to master death, and should she realize she was tricked and her actions of the past few years were built on a lie, she could try to seek revenge on the Old Gods through her own cunning terms.
While it's strongly implied that N'Zoth is the final boss of Battle for Azeroth, Sylvanas' elaborate schemes stand in the way of a traditional unified build-up to fighting the Old Gods, and we're curious to see how her endgame and plan to master death will affect the fate of Azeroth.
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