There’s always one…
Sorry…didn’t mean to step on your joke. I just…have this irresistible urge to bludgeon some sense into science-ignoring flat-earthers. With a harmless foam mallet, of course…
P.S. And I’m not saying you are one.
I like using anti flat earth science to legitimize that Azeroth is flat.
For Azeroth anyway, I believe it was said best above
Azeroth is 2D because our computer screens are 2D. So what we need are holograms. Shouldn’t that technology be out by now?
It is my secret desire some quest designer will steal this and create a bunch of goblins or gnomes or both that act like real life flat Earthers, except the science is reversed. The nonsense real flat Earth types is used to prove Azeroth round, and actual science is used like crazy conspiracy nuts.
Azeroth started off with one super continent like Pangaea called Kalimdor. We have a pretty good idea where every piece of that continent went after it was sundered.
Honestly, Dragon Isles is pretty much the last possible Azeroth-based location, otherwise it stretches the limits of what makes any sense. Heck, even realistically Dragon Isles don’t make that much sense. They were hidden from sight, but they shouldn’t nearly as unknown as they are. If they were part of Kalimdor, and the Night Elf kingdom stretched over most of Kalimdor, then why does no one have any idea that it used to exist?
Even Pandaria, the other secret continent, people knew about it and just didn’t know how to get there because it was impossible to reach (but as soon as the shroud went down, the Zandalari were able to go there because they knew where it was).
No more islands. I do not want to see this -
https://i.pinimg.com/736x/0c/24/8c/0c248c8ed372e4eb01740dd5b93c5e00--word-of-warcraft-warcraft-legion.jpg
I disagree, I think the map should look like an explosion of land after a GREAT sundering.
Plus the cosmic story isn’t working out to well for them, just saying.
I wanna know is… whats on the other side of azeroth…!?