World Of Warcraft Comics Vol. 1 - 4 ★ Recent

You get King Varian Wrynn’s memory loss arc, Lo’Gosh the gladiator, Valeera Sanguinar, and Broll Bearmantle. It’s messy but full of “oh, that’s where that came from” moments for longtime players. The Not-So-Good 1. Inconsistent art across volumes. Vol. 1 has a 90s Image Comics roughness (stiff poses, over-rendered muscles). Vol. 3’s dark watercolors are stunning. Vol. 4’s cartooning is adorable but feels like a different franchise. The tonal whiplash is real.

It’s necessary lore but feels like a side quest stretched to 100 pages. The dragon romance subplot is… let’s say ambitious . World of Warcraft Comics Vol. 1 - 4

Vol. 3 → Vol. 1 (key chapters only) → Vol. 4 → Vol. 2 (if you’re a completionist). You get King Varian Wrynn’s memory loss arc,

It follows Tyri and the captured netherwing dragon—good for lore hounds wanting to know what happened to the red dragonflight in Outland. Christie Golden’s writing keeps characters human (or elven) even when the plot drags. Inconsistent art across volumes