
Originally Posted by
Arnenna
World of warcraft video games were here before the books. The books were based on the game, not the other way around, and they were not hugely successful when compared to the work of Tolkien. The game built the stories, not the literature. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings alone has sold 150 million copies. Compare that with the 14 million World of Warcraft book and its very easy to see that this game is based on a fictional masterpiece and why WoW, isn't and never was. Its a game that tried to branch out into the book market and it didn't take off, probably because the game's players weren't there for any particular story other than what the game fed them. If World of Warcraft had published firstly as a book, 70 years before the game launch, with a reading audience of 150 million people, they would have had to stick to the story or it wouldn't have worked. World of Warcraft books are a mere 16 years old, compared with the writing of Tolkien which began 85 years ago. The fan base of the two pieces of fiction are miles apart, both in expectations and number. Anything based on Warcraft will attract people who are into the video game primarily, because the game came first. Anything based on Tolkien will catch the readers first and foremost because the book came first, 70 years prior, followed by the movie fans and then by video game players who are in if for the game, not anything to do with the story or who wrote it. They are the smallest proportion of the player base.
For the purpose of this thread though, and back to the topic it raised. I don't think this TV series will have any effect on the true Tolkien fans that play this game. If its entertaining, they may watch it, if its ridiculous over the top fantasy, they probably wont, but they will still come here for their real LotR fix (meaning as close to the book as they can get), which is based on a book that they love and cherish. If the producers ever stray too far away from that, they will lose their main audience.
I agree with pretty much everything you've said here. Just a small correction though, Tolkien began writing his legendarium over a hundred years ago, not eight-five as you stated. He wrote The Fall of Gondolin in an army barracks in England in 1917, while recovering from the trench fever he contracted in the Battle of the Somme.
I plan to watch the new series, hopefully with an open mind and judge for myself whether or not it's worthy of sticking around for. I have serious reservations, given some of the things I've read, but you never know, it might surprise.
“If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went.”
- Will Rogers