N'zoth and his fanatical Twilight Cultists

In BfA, we did see the Old God’s influence both with Lord Stormsong who was driven insane and Zul the Dark Prophet who orchestrated a coup against King Rastakhan.
Zul with his gift of foresight, he now pushing his all of Zandalar to abandoned the Loa in favor of his Blood God G’huun (and by extension N’zoth’s will).

Since they screw it with Archbishop Benedictus, their should’ve been a longer questline and even Cho’gall not even being the final boss of the Twilight Citadel. He had been a figure since the Shadow Council, atleast he could’ve had an external corruption fight with a climax.

Either way, the Twilight’s Hammer Cult is the most dangerous cult out there because they are truly batsh!t insane due to their communing with the Old One’s. But they are effective since each of them are ready to die for their cause to usher in the end times.

Seems weird N’zoth used so little of them this time compared to Cataclysm.
They bring color to the story!

I’m mostly curious about where they seem to find their members.

The human and orc races have pretty much been devastated since the Dark Portal opened, and the Twilight Hammer Cult is not exactly all too concerned with the safety, welfare and preservation of their own members, yet they seem to be able to pull out armies of those loons.

1 Like

Titan’s apologist thread

Why sucking light’s big iron, as a pala, is considered “good” despite light, turning almost everyone who is worship it, into retards (only Illidan has strong enough will to resist), pawn to the Light plans. But following the Nzoth, who by all accounts and metrics, doing exactly the same, - giving out the “power” and care in exchange for servitude - considered “bad”?

We’ll see in the Jailer by the end of the expansion, the skill of the current dev team when it comes to making good enemies.

Well, let’s see. At the moment the idea presented by Locus Walker and “Light see 1 path, Void sees many possibilities as truths” is not supported by anything in-universe, except for the “Enemy Infiltration” book of unknown origin. And players irl have no problems with believing the ethereal+dreadlord team as the truth.

So, should he hold higher standards for people with who knows what education, who live in a world filled with supposedly world-ending threats on the annual basis and where you’re only going to get some sympathy if you’re a “big” well known person (and even then it’s seemingly reserved for the dev favourites)?

Regular people are treated as disposable. There was a blasted demon-worshiping cult in Duskwood and no higher-ups throughout BfA ever bothered to ask what is going on in that location: are people starving, what’s happening with it’s defense, all the supernatural stuff from which regular citizens (kind of, Night Watch) were protecting the denizens till they befell to such influence.

And they can see that their pains and troubles are considered to be of little importance in comparison to a sad orc. So, if someone deside to risk and get a drop of power that maybe could help them or their loved ones while Jaina is busy touching Thrall, is it all that surprising? Idk honestly.


gl hf

This topic was automatically closed 30 days after the last reply. New replies are no longer allowed.