![]() The wall was built after the Second War, when Genn Greymane decided to pull his nation from the Alliance of Lordaeron and determined that his people were self-sufficient enough to run their own affairs and protect their own borders. Gilneas did not build its famous wall to protect it from the Scourge. until, of course, the coming of the Scourge. Ruling over the settlers of neaby Pyrewood Village, the Baron seemed a relatively capable leader. Yes, before it was a dungeon, Shadowfang Keep was the ancestral home of Baron Silverlaine, a noble who owed allegiance to Gilneas and whose ancestral lands lay just outside of where the Greymane Wall would be erected. Well, unless you like your keeps to be atmospheric, top-filled with raging monstrosities and jam-packed with the loots - in which case, the former estate of Baron Silverlaine awaits you. In short, time hasn't done much to improve Shadowfang Keep's general disposition. Now, some six years on, it's a brooding ruin infested with those dastardly undead, led by three traitors to both the Forsaken and Gilneas itself, also jam-packed with the ghosts of its former worgen masters and their victims. It debuted in vanilla WoW as a brooding ruin infested with those dastardly worgen and the angry, unquiet ghosts of their victims. Since I talked about Gilneas last week, it only makes sense to continue the discussion with one of the most worgen-centric places in all of the World of Warcraft, namely storied Shadowfang Keep. You're playing the game, you're fighting the bosses, you know the how - but do you know the why? Each week, Matthew Rossi and Anne Stickney make sure you Know Your Lore by covering the history of the story behind World of Warcraft. The World of Warcraft is an expansive universe.
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