Tauren crest, "Icon of the Earth Mother." The Tauren are a fictional race of bipeds, one of the major races of the Warcraft universe. They are religious, but are better known for their strength, courage, and endurance as warriors. A nomadic race as old as the Night Elves, the Tauren are attuned to the earth and its spirits, and have a largely shamanistic culture that stresses ancestor worship and the honored path of the hunter. Their capital of Thunder Bluff sits in the central Kalimdor territory of Mulgore, and they are aligned with the Horde in the present conflict (as depicted in World of Warcraft). Notably, the Tauren are the only race besides the Night elves that can become Druids. Image File history File links Image of the Tauren logo from Blizzard Entertainments video game series, Warcraft Universe. ...
Image File history File links Image of the Tauren logo from Blizzard Entertainments video game series, Warcraft Universe. ...
This image is a candidate for speedy deletion. ...
ÃNight Elves are a fictional race of elves in Blizzard Entertainments Warcraft series of computer games. ...
A shaman doctor of Kyzyl. ...
Thunder Bluff as seen in the World of Warcraft. ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Locations in the Warcraft Universe. ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Locations in the Warcraft Universe. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
World of Warcraft (commonly abbreviated as WoW) is a massive multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) developed by Blizzard Entertainment and is the fourth game in the Warcraft series, excluding expansion packs and the cancelled Warcraft Adventures: Lord of the Clans. ...
Female Night Elf Druid wearing Cenarion Raiment item set Druids in World of Warcraft are a hybrid class, able to transform into various forms to suit a variety of tasks. ...
Appearance The Tauren are huge bipeds with a general bovine appearance resembling the Minotaur of Greek mythology. The Tauren have an average weight of 500 to 750 kilograms (1100-1650 lb) and can grow up to 4 metres (13 ft) tall. Sexual dimorphism is present in the species, with the males being eight feet tall with an enormous, muscular build. Females are shorter and more delicately built, with smaller horns, but are still massive and muscular when compared to other races. Like humans (and quite disimilar from a typical bovine), the Tauren have breasts on their chest rather than an udder on their lower belly. Tauren shamans are often seen carrying their ancestral totems, which are essentially large carved out logs. These logs are often used as weapons, along with the polearm weapon of the Tauren chieftains. Other Shamans carry staves or maces, and although they have the ability to learn how to use daggers. The Taurens'ecologically focused beliefs do not allow them to wield large swords. In Greek mythology, the Minotaur (Greek: ÎινÏÏαÏ
ÏοÏ, Minótauros) was a creature that was said to be part man and part bull. ...
The bust of Zeus found at Otricoli (Sala Rotonda, Museo Pio-Clementino, Vatican) Greek mythology is the body of stories belonging to the Ancient Greeks concerning their gods and heroes, the nature of the world and the origins and significance of their own cult and ritual practices. ...
The kilogram or kilogramme (symbol: kg) is the SI base unit of mass. ...
Female (left) and male Common Pheasant, illustrating the dramatic difference in both color and size, between the sexes Sexual dimorphism is the systematic difference in form between individuals of different sex in the same species. ...
A totem is any entity which watches over or assists a group of people, such as a family, clan or tribe (Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary [1] and Websters New World College Dictionary, Fourth Edition). ...
A pole weapon or polearm is a close combat weapon with the main fighting part of the weapon placed on the end of a long shaft, typically of wood. ...
It should be noted that while the graphics in Warcraft III may suggest truly immense Tauren, and portray them as giant, bare-breasted bull-men, the proportions in this game are intentionally skewed. In World of Warcraft -- a much more realistic game in terms of scale -- male Tauren are almost uniformly twelve feet tall (though Cairne Bloodhoof is slightly larger, as is the Disciple of Naralex within the Wailing Caverns instance). Tauren of this size probably weigh less than the nine hundred pounds suggested above, though as they likely are about the same density of large modern mammals, they probably do weigh considerably more than humans. Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos, released by Blizzard Entertainment in 2002, is a real-time strategy computer game // Overview An in-game screenshot of humans (blue) fighting orcs (red). ...
The Wailing Caverns is a location set in Blizzard Entertainments video game and book series, Warcraft. ...
Tauren fingers and toes have fluctuated since their genesis. Original concept art shows them with three fingers and a thumb, and the models in Warcraft III and The Frozen Throne seem to reflect this. However, in World of Warcraft, Tauren were given thick forearms with two fingers and a thumb. Presumably this is the correct and final number. In Warcraft III, the icon for Warstomp, a Tauren ability, shows a single-toed hoof, far more akin to a horse's foot than a cow's. However, the models in the game do show cloven hooves, more like a typical bovine. In World of Warcraft, the foot structure was altered again, making the Tauren flat footed (unlike typical bovines) and the rounding of the front edge of the hoof. In physics, a fluctuation is a variation in an extensive or intensive quantity, such as energy, density or voltage, from its spatial or temporal average. ...
Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos, released by Blizzard Entertainment in 2002, is a real-time strategy computer game // Overview An in-game screenshot of humans (blue) fighting orcs (red). ...
Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos, released by Blizzard Entertainment in 2002, is a real-time strategy computer game // Overview An in-game screenshot of humans (blue) fighting orcs (red). ...
Abilities The Tauren of the World of Warcraft universe have certain racial abilities (as do all other playable races in the game). Seen as the most useful of these abilities is the 'Warstomp,' which stuns up to five enemies around the Tauren for two seconds and also interrupts spellcasting. It should be noted that the Warstomp has a 0.5 second cast time which can be delayed from any damage source. 'Cultivation' is the Tauren racial ability which increases the skill level of the Herbalism profession in the amount of 15 profession points. This allows the character to harvest herbs of a higher level sooner. All Tauren also receive a 5% health increase from their racial ability 'Endurance.' The 5% increase is calculated from the characters base health, that is, before stats are attributed. For example, if the character has a base health of 100, with a +2 stamina, the overall health with 'Endurance' will be 100, plus the 20 for stamina, plus the 5% of 100, for a total of 125. The last of the Tauren's racial abilities is 'Nature Resistance' which increases character resistance to Nature magic by 10.
History Before the Horde As noted, the Tauren are one of the ancient races of Azeroth. Prior to meeting the Orcs, the Tauren were a nomadic race, though it seems that they played little role in the grand dynamic of Azeroth for millennia. In fact, when encountered by the Orcs and their Warchief, Thrall, they were under significant pressure from the Centaurs and their tribes were separated. The Tauren do have a rich history which they have kept over the centuries, handed down over the ages through oral tradition; one such passage is as follows: Male and Female Orcs as seen in the World of Warcraft. ...
Communities of nomadic people move from place to place, rather than settling down in one location. ...
Azeroth is a demon in Syrian mythology Azeroth is a fictional place in the Warcraft Universe; it has been the name given to a kingdom, a continent, and lately an entire world. ...
Thrall is a fictional character in the Warcraft universe, and one of the main protagonists of the games and books. ...
Legend holds that the primitive, barbaric centaurs are actually the bastard offspring of the night elf demigod, Cenarius. ...
Oral tradition or oral culture is a way of transmitting history, literature or law from one generation to the next in a civilization without a writing system. ...
"Before the Age of Memory, the gentle Earthmother breathed upon the golden mists of dawn. Where the amber clouds came to rest, there were endless fields of flowing wheat and barley. This was the basin of her works - the great basket of life and hope. The Earthmother's eyes shone down upon the lands she had breathed into creation. Her right eye, An'she (the sun), gave warmth and light to the land. Her left eye, Mu'sha (the moon), gave peace and sleep to the stirring creatures of the dawning. Such was the power of her gaze that the Earthmother closed one dreaming eye for every turning of the sky. Thus, her loving gaze turned day into night for the first dawning of the world. While the right eye shone down upon the golden dawn, the Earthmother's gentle hands spread out across the golden plains. Wherever the shadow of her arms passed, a noble people arose from the rich soil. The Shu'halo (the Tauren) arose to give thanks and prayer to their loving mother. There in the endless fields of dawn, the children of the earth swore themselves to her grace and vowed to bless her name until the final darkening of the world." A salad in a bowl sits next to a small pie in a pie dish Chawan, drinking bowls used in a Japanese tea ceremony Bowls used as construction tools in contemporary India. ...
Allegiance with the Horde The Orcs, led by Warchief Thrall, had come to Kalimdor seeking a land of their own, and in the course of establishing an early presence there, came upon the leader of the Bloodhoof tribe, Cairne Bloodhoof. Cairne sensed a great ally and leader in Thrall, and sought his alliance in fighting off their ancestral enemy, the Centaurs. In return, Cairne pledged his alliance to the Orc Warchief. For their part, the Orcs and the Jungle Trolls that composed the Horde found much in common with the Tauren. Each of these races wanted to achieve a more shamanistic culture, and the Tauren, long versed in the lore of spirit and nature, were well-prepared to provide counsel and support to the budding Horde. From then on, the Tauren became an inseparable part of the Horde, fighting with the Horde alongside the Alliance and Night Elves at the Battle of Mt. Hyjal, and later helped combat the forces of Lordaeron, led by Grand Admiral Daelin Proudmoore, when he attempted to invade Durotar. Male and Female Orcs as seen in the World of Warcraft. ...
Cairne Bloodhoof is the leader of the Tauren people in the Warcraft universe. ...
Two Jungle Trolls, as seen in World of Warcraft. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
ÃNight Elves are a fictional race of elves in Blizzard Entertainments Warcraft series of computer games. ...
Mount Hyjal Mount Hyjal is a fictional mountain found in the fantasy Warcraft Universe. ...
In the fictionl Warcraft Universe, Admiral Daelin Proudmoore is the ruler of the nation of Kul Tiras. ...
In the fictional Warcraft Universe, Durotar is a nation founded by the Horde, to serve as a new homeland for the orcs, and is named after Thralls father Durotan. ...
Present After the invasion of the Orc homeland of Durotar was repelled (as depicted in Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne), Cairne, with the help of the Horde, united the tribes of Tauren and settled his weary people in a new homeland, the lush plains of Mulgore. The capital city Thunder Bluff is built on a series of mesas which are connected to one another via rope and wooden bridges. At present, the Tauren are still ruled by Cairne Bloodhoof. However, even Cairne admits that he is unusually old for a Tauren (ninety-nine years old when he first joined the Horde), and the leadership of the Tauren may thus change very soon. Common wisdom hold that his successor will likely be Cairne's own son, Baine Bloodhoof, but at this time such talk is simply speculation, particularly with the emergence of Elder Crone Magatha and her tribe, the Grimtotems, a tribe usually a distinctive midnight black in coloring, as a member of the Council of Thunder Bluff. The Tauren continue to supply fierce warriors and wise shamans to the Horde and are currently involved in the renewed conflict on Azeroth. In the fictional Warcraft Universe, Durotar is a nation founded by the Horde, to serve as a new homeland for the orcs, and is named after Thralls father Durotan. ...
Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos, released by Blizzard Entertainment in 2002, is a real-time strategy computer game and the second sequel to Warcraft. ...
This is a list of the major and minor Locations ordered by region (after the events of Third Great War) in the Warcraft universe â a fictional universe in which a series of video games and books are set. ...
Thunder Bluff as seen in the World of Warcraft. ...
Mathematics Engineering and Science Achievement (MESA) is a current program that is building in schools around the United States. ...
Baine Bloodhoof is the son of Tauren chieftan Cairne Bloodhoof and chief of Bloodhoof Village in Mulgore. ...
Azeroth is a demon in Syrian mythology Azeroth is a fictional place in the Warcraft Universe; it has been the name given to a kingdom, a continent, and lately an entire world. ...
Tauren Clans - Bloodhoof Clan
- Grimtotem Clan
- Runetotem Clan
- Wildmane Clan
- Ragetotem Clan
- Thunderhorn Clan
- Skyseer Clan
- Cliffrunner Clan
- Snowhoof Clan
- Waterseer Clan
Trivia - In the beta version of World of Warcraft, Tauren could not use mounts. Instead, they could gain an ability called "plains-running", which gave them a large, temporary speed boost.
- The female Tauren's dance is derived from the four-wall line dance known as the Electric Slide, while one of the male's dance cycles is based on the Dancing Banana.
- The Tauren refer to themselves as the Shu'halo.
- "Tauren" is an anagram of "nature".
- 土人 (pinyin: tŭrén) means native or aboriginal in Mandarin
- Taurens are the only race in World of Warcraft that makes a sound when using the /moo emote.
- Taurens are the only race in World of Warcraft that can't use wands.
- Taurens are the only race in World of Warcraft that will never wear cloth armor, because they don't have access to cloth wearing classes (mages, warlocks and priests). Some healing classes will lower their armor class to wear cloth to better their healing, but no available class is forced to wear cloth armor.
The Electric Slide is another reference to a dance originally called The Madison. The Madison was developed in the mid 1950s and is a four wall line dance. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
To meet Wikipedias content policies and video game article guidelines, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
To meet Wikipedias content policies and video game article guidelines, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
To meet Wikipedias content policies and video game article guidelines, this article or section may require cleanup. ...
External links | | | Humans • Dwarves • Gnomes • Night Elves • Draenei • Orcs • Tauren • Trolls • The Forsaken • Blood Elves • Undead • Goblins • Pandaren • High Elves • Ogres • Murlocs • Naga World of Warcraft (commonly abbreviated as WoW) is a massive multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) developed by Blizzard Entertainment and is the fourth game in the Warcraft series, excluding expansion packs and the cancelled Warcraft Adventures: Lord of the Clans. ...
Look up Wiki in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
This image is a candidate for speedy deletion. ...
Humans are one of two races which appear as playable in every game of the fictional Warcraft franchise, the other being the Orcs. ...
A Dwarf as seen in the World of Warcraft. ...
Gnomes as seen in World of Warcraft (without Armor). ...
The Night elves are a fictional race in Blizzard Entertainments Warcraft series of computer games and novels. ...
Draenei as seen in World of Warcraft: The Burning Crusade. ...
Male and Female Orcs as seen in the World of Warcraft. ...
In the fictional Warcraft Universe, Trolls are a race of tall although often crouching, lanky humanoids. ...
Forsaken crest, Icon of Torment. ...
An example of a male and female Blood Elf. ...
Undead box art for the release of Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos. ...
Goblin male and female from the World of Warcraft. ...
Pandaren from Warcraft III: TFT. Pandaren are one of many fictional races in Warcraft Universe. ...
High Elves as seen in World of Warcraft. ...
Two Ogres as seen in the World of Warcraft. ...
Murloc as seen in the World of Warcraft. ...
The Naga (the name is both singular and plural) are a fictional race of creatures from the world of the Warcraft computer games by Blizzard Entertainment. ...
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