My vote is for more void Elf style that is unique to void elves. Dreads, void hair ornaments and beads, glowing void purple and hot pink, true black, a rich, deep lavender, and glowing long beards with ornaments to match.
As for Blood Elves- check out the Blood Elf faces in BC, they are wonderful. I wonder how hard it would be to keep the new model and revert to the older faces?
I love having all the faces I used forever in BC back- especially the male ‘Elvis face’.
Oh, and then if the Void Elves kept the new faces- we’d look different than the Bloods. They would still be the ‘prettiest race!’
I would actually find it hilarious if they overlapped elf customizations even more to the point that color-coding elves was just not even possible anymore
Even beyond that, yeah I don’t care so much about the visual distinction
I mean, I feel you. I don’t see a distinction at this point but some blood elves will swear up and down that visual distinction must be maintained. Some void elves will scream about not wanting to be made into blood elves and want more void customizations. I was simply offering something of a compromise that would possibly satisfy all three groups in one fell swoop.
Hair dye exists in WoW lore. There’s really no reason why any race would be excluded from some of the more basic hair colors, including blonde/brunette.
I get ya. Personally to me, I really don’t care about “Blood Elf” identity, because in the end we’re all just High Elves. Some a bit more edgier than others.
I also just played a Blood Elf because they look like humans and I’m that boring person who would play a human (if the Alliance ones weren’t so dang ugly)
That’s really what they should have done, gone all out crazy with the void elves.
They are “in between”… a place where the Worgen female once were. They are not fully monsterous, not exactly pretty or cute so I wish there was something else about them.
The idea of getting “confused” is impossible unless you’re genuinely blind, and if that’s the case you shouldn’t be caring about distinction in the first place.