Well obviously Tolkien did... he was an Anglo-Saxon professor at Oxford and expert in mythology/old Norse theologies. The fact is that he used these influences and mythologies to create something
fictional and entertaining- that's where the fantasy genre derives from. There's no unwritten rule that states all fantasy writing and magical universes must take a leaf from Tolkien's book -- I mean, just look at Harry Potter!
. Yet, Warhammer/Warcraft are both basically carbon-copies of the Lord of the Rings lore, shamelessly.
I mean, let's look at orcs. Orcs are the ultimate 'badguy' in Warhammer, Lord of the Rings and, to a lesser extent, Warcraft. Orcs were completely invented by Tolkien... Orc is the embodiment of everything that Tolkien hates:
Oxford Rugby Club (it's not actually called that though, but I digress). It's hilarious that all of these fantasy authors and writers have these archetypal 'orc' character, when they are basically just the humanoid personification of Tolkien's own pet-hates, his local rugby club. Of course the word itself has a longer mythical etymology but Tolkien himself stated that he chose the word chiefly because of the phonetic qualities (supposedly sounding 'demonic') and because of the sly reference
. I find things like this hilarious, but it doesn't surprise me when franchises such as Warcraft make the changes we're discussing here in this thread.
And, random trivia, I'm actually studying under Tolkien's own protégé myself when I read old/middle-English
Tolkien was a mentor to a top academic named J.A. Burrow, who (as far as I'm told) was the personal tutor in the same Middle-English studies of my current professor whilst at Bristol University. For me, who spent many an hour reading the Lord of the Rings books, this is the equivalent of a literal orgasm. Yes, I'm sad.
Last edited by Uzique (2009-01-02 22:55:13)