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===From Video Games=== *'''The Third Age Second Fellowship''': A B-Team Fellowship who are the playable characters in The Lord of the Rings: The Third Age. Sadly, they're all very, very stock as characters, but at least they got to be the protagonists of one of the better Middle-Earth games. ** '''Berethor''': Gondor Citadel Guard sent by Denethor to find his son Boromir, and also secretly a Manchurian Agent for Saruman and carries another secret in his body. Is fear-proof, and this is actually something that factors into the gameplay. ** '''Idrial''': Discount Arwen, being a female Elf who fights with a falchion and water magic and who falls in love with the heroic man of Gondor (Berethor in this case). Gets a bit green-eyed when Morwen shows up as a result. ** '''Elegost''': A Dunedain Ranger who is the party's token archer character. [[Gotrek & Felix|Is best friends with a Dwarf named Hadhod, who is his travelling companion]]. ** '''Hadhod''': Party's token Dwarf, but can do shit Gimli can't (fire and earth magic, namely). [[Gotrek & Felix|Is best friends with a Ranger named Elegost, who is his travelling companion]]. ** '''Morwen''': Woman of Rohan [[Rule 34|with a bare midriff]] orphaned when Saruman's forces scour the lands, she joins the party as the closest thing they have to a dedicated thief/rogue. [[Slayers|Fights with dual axes and has a need for vengeance against the enemy]]. ** '''Eaoden''': Last member of the party to be recruited, which sadly has the effect of making him even ''more'' lacking in personality than the rest. Also from Rohan, he's one of Theoden's Royal Guards and can actually become a serious powerhouse depending on how you allocate his points. *'''Battle for Middle-Earth OCs''': Since not every faction in these games has a large number of named folks from the books and films to draw on, EA had to get creative, and so invented some playable hero units whole cloth: ** '''Drogoth the Dragon Lord''': Hero unit for the Goblins, and basically going "fuck that" to the idea of Smaug being the last dragon. ** '''Gorkil the Goblin King''': Goblin with delusions of grandeur who hopes to win Sauron's favor by causing trouble in the North. Rides a giant scorpion into battle. ** '''Hwaldar the Brigand''': A Rhudaur hill chief secretly in league with the Witch-King. Hero unit for the Angmar faction. ** '''Karsh the Whisperer''': Former Captain of Arnor named Carthaen who the Witch-King turns into a wraith to serve as one of his minions instead of his enemies. Hero unit for Angmar. ** '''Morgomir''': Lieutenant of Carn DΓ»m and a Black Numenorean captain who has become of the Nazgul themselves. Hero unit for Angmar. ** '''Rogash''': The Witch-King's right-hand Troll, being a lot smarter and more dangerous than the standard Olog. Hero unit for Angmar. *'''Shadow of Mordor and Shadow of War Characters''': The cast of Monolith Production's video game duology: **'''Talion''': Protagonist and pure Badass by way of being a brutal one-man army who can cleave through scores of Uruks, kill Ologs, bring Fire Drakes to heel, and even ''fight and beat Nazgul and Sauron himself''. Looks a lot like Aragorn, but his story goes down a much darker path. Slain along with his wife and son at the start of the game, he is resurrected (sort of), by the spirit of Celebrimbor, turning him into a wraith ''not'' bound to Sauron. From there, he becomes [[Konrad Curze|a ruthless, brutal figure who lives in a world of darkness and evil surrounded on all sides by evildoers he spends his time brutally killing, maiming, and terrorizing]]. Ultimately becomes a cautionary tale about trying to be a Grimdark Anti-Hero in Tolkien's world though; his bearing a new ring of power made by Celebrimbor and using it to bend Uruks and Ologs to his will to build an army in Mordor, makes him all-too similar to the Dark Lord he's fighting against. It culminates in him losing said Ring, taking a discarded Nazgul ring to save himself, and as a result, becoming one of Sauron's nine Nazgul. A lesson in ''not'' fighting Sauron using his methods learned the hard way. In all, most Tolkien purists would consider him way too [[Grimdark]] for J.R.R.'s fiction, and have argued that Tolkien would be horrified by his game's content. But again, given what happens to Talion, it's clear the writers understood the inherent folly in trying to fight Sauron with his own methods. Talion is best seen then as a cautionary tale (and thus a reaffirming of Tolkien's values), not a bastardization ([[Skub|this does not stop people from seeing him and his games as that though)]]. **'''Ioreth and Dirhael''': Talion's wife and son, who, as the wife and son of a tragic Anti-Hero in a [[Grimdark]] story, suffer exactly the fate you expect them to. In Ioreth's case, [[Critical Role|this is not the only time her VA has played a character in a Fantasy series with a sexy faux-British accent who's in love with a brooding, vengeful Anti-Hero]]. **'''The Black Captains''': A trio of Black Numenoreans who act as the main antagonists of the first game. Each represents a different aspect of Sauron's character, and as the folks who murdered Talion's wife and son, are at the top of his shit-list. They are: ***'''Black Hand of Sauron''': Leader of the bunch. [[Tzeentch|Represents the deceitfulness of Sauron]]. Lets his body become a vessel for Sauron so that the latter can temporarily regain his iconic black-armored, physical form. ***'''Hammer of Sauron''': A former Numenorean from the Battle of the Last Alliance [[Angron|who was angry and resentful enough to turn on his fellows]], picking up Sauron's discarded mace and letting it corrupt him (since it seems all of Sauron's stuff does that). [[Khorne|Represents Sauron's physical might and just a generally very angry guy]]. ***'''Tower of Sauron''': A tall, scary guy [[Slaanesh|who looks a bit like something out of Hellraiser and accordingly serves as a torturer for Sauron. He represents the horror and viciousness of Sauron]]. **'''Eltariel''': A black-clad Elf who acts as a personal assassin for Galadriel, specially tasked with fighting the Nazgul. Badass enough to keep pace with Talion (and ironically has the same voice actress as his dead wife). Takes the New Ring after Talion loses it and becomes a Nazgul. **'''Idril''': Gondorian woman who is the daughter of the man in charge of Minas Ithil (which falls much later in the Shadow of Mordor/War continuity). Her daddy betrays the city to the Witch-King on the condition that Idril will be spared, and afterwards Idril leads the surviving Gondorian forces in Mordor. Comments on various collectibles Talion can find scattered throughout Mordor. ** '''Baranor''': A man born in Harad who was given to Gondor as part of a peace exchange and raised by them. Actually did pretty well for himself, becoming a captain in Gondor's army and helping lead the defense of Minas Ithil before it falls. Playable in one of Shadow of War's DLCs, and since he has no Ring of Power, if he dies, its actually Game Over. **'''Carnan''': An Ent-Wife (or else something like it) and a super-powerful nature spirit who talks weird. Said to be a contemporary of Morgoth, which would make her ''ancient'' if true. Resides in a very forested, scenic part of Mordor that feels more like a part of Lothlorien or Rivendell then anything under Sauron's control, but that is likely owing in part to Carnan's presence. Though mostly a neutral figure unconcerned with the affairs of lesser beings, when a Balrog starts burning her forest down, she joins forces with Talion and Celebrimbor. **'''Tar-Goroth''': A Balrog awakened by the forging of the New Ring, meaning his rampage is technically Talion and Celebrimbor's fault. There for the sake of having a boss fight with a Balrog. **'''Zog the Eternal''': An Uruk sorcerer who seeks to summon Tar-Goroth and use him as a living weapon, including against Sauron himself, making him an Uruk with delusions of grandeur. Suffice to say, Talion puts a stop to his plans. **'''Bruz the Chopper''': An Olog with an Australian accent who is one of Talion's first recruits, but later turns on him when he doesn't get a promotion. Talion responds by mind-raping him, which drives him insane. What happens to him after that is up to the player. **'''Suladan''': OC Nazgul made for the games, one who funny enough shares a name with one of Games Workshop's original characters from the Lord of the Rings: Strategy Battle Game. Nothing to suggest this is the same character though. His backstory is basically Ar-Pharazon, but a king of the South instead of Numenor, and turned into a Nazgul instead of getting punished by Eru. **'''Nazgul Sisters (Riya and Yukka)''': Yes, seriously. A pair of twin sisters from an [[Cathay|obscure, rarely seen kingdom of man based off of Asian cultures]] who killed two of Sauron's Nazgul and took their Rings for themselves...which turned them into new Nazgul. Actually try to take power for themselves, but after Eltariel whoops their asses they seem to give up on that idea. Fight with Kusarigama type weapons instead of the usual Morgul Blades.
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