This wasn't the only dataminer that spotted it either, as I poked our friend MrGM to take a look at whether this was really there, and it is! According to him the area shouldn't be accessible by players so the sword is very likely not supposed to be there in the final build, if it'll even exist at all.

While this is almost certainly just a fun little tease/joke for the dataminers, or even something weirder like a scaling tool or maybe just a mislabeled asset, there is still a veery slight chance that the sword (perhaps not in its actual physical state, since it was shattered) makes an appearance in the patch.


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We do currently theorize that we will get to see Arthas (or a version/part of him) in the raid itself, as his appearance seems likely considering the details of the Anduin raid encounter we talked about here.


Also, in case you were wondering, it's not a new model, as this one was already used back in Legion for the Death Knight artifact quest (although this one is a lot bluer, which makes me think it's actually being used as a marker or similar). Whatever the reason, it's a very cool little detail and it's always great to see the iconic weapon in the actual game!

Seeing as how Frostmourne in canon was shattered when Bolvar decided to call on the light for help...And even if you wanted to reforge it the Frost Death Knights already used the shards to create a new weapon set...yeah.

That doesn't matter. We're in the shadowlands. The place where frostmourne was made. Zovaal has the means and the ability to make a second one if he wanted to. Who's to say he didn't after knowing that the first frostmourne was broken? He made Kingsmourne pretty easily. So your logic is pretty flawed.

If they were to make Frostmourne a transmog somehow, I wouldn't be mad. Besides. We already have every other legendary weapon that's out there that can be transmogged barring Atiesh. So maybe we can finally have Frostmourne. Maybe not. We'll see.

What pull? What story? The story at hand is that Jailer pulled the blueprints for Frostmourne and the Helm of Domination from The Primus. He then used those blueprints to make them both and Give them to the Dread Lords/Denathrius to give to the Legion. There is literally nothing story/lore wise that could prevent them from making a second Helm and Sword. Not one thing. Especially when you consider where we are and what is around us, who is around us, and the technology of said place. So I honestly don't believe you know what can and can't be done in the lore/game.

I am looking for as many tips and tricks as possible to enable me to forge out a replica of frostmourne a sword origionaly made as a single handed blade but a friend of mine wants it to be a two handed monster. Here is a picture of the blade itself.

That is a fantasy sord it's form is not reflective of real forging methods. It is also not designed in logical way that reflects a knowledge of the craft. I suppose you could craft it from substitute materials to get that look but steel is not even that color. Or if you wanted to do several days of grinding you could get something sort of close.

If you really want that shape I would heavily consider drawing the profile of the blade and tang, then contacting a company that laser or water jet or plasma cuts. Send them your design and dimensions Choose a new steel that will work and is the right thickness. I think the quickest beveling would be done with a nice belt grinder, but a lot of work can be done with a 4.5" angle grinder and good new sharp files.

The colour is not something I am going for, just the shape. That is just a rendered image in high definition. I dont see why forging it would be such a problem. there are many horned blades that have been forged.

If you're looking for someone here to tell you, hey, no problem Razz this is how I whipped one out you're going to draw a blank. Even forging a strait double edged sword requires allot of experience and skill.......I'd get it plaz or waterjet cut and then do some forging or stock removal to get it to shape.

Many have been forged by you? How long have you been making swords, or any forge work? Have you even read anything in the knife making classes here or referances? trolls dont last too long here, Time will tell.

If you really are serious, you should start learning the basics of IFI posting as well as how to forge, and then you may understand why you got these type of reply's. Also I edited your post for bad language.

Sorry bout the bad language, didn't know that was such an offensive word. If i wasn't passionate why did I just spend almost all of my day at my forge when I could and it wasn't raining? Just because I have decided on a very difficult project doesn't necessarily mean ill fail? If Einstein didn't press on he would have achieved nothing. I am also interested as to your troll comment? Is it aimed at me?

And yes of course I have been reading the knife making forums, almost backwards I am not an idiot who fires up a jet engine without reading and re-reading the manual many times, I might be the idiot though who tries it and succeeds. I have been to a few knife making seminars as well. This is my passion and it will stay that way. I am learning the basics at the same time as tackling this project. If I fail I will learn more than a few lessons as to why. If I succeed? Well then its another thing I can add to my life's achievements and a goal passed.

That is not a sword that is feasible to forge. Nearly all "fantasy" swords are wonderfully imaginative, but ridiculously impractical.


You have been given constructive advice. The issue is that your project is so far out of the realm of realistic blacksmithing. You might be able to forge the blade, but the hilt and crossguard would have to be cast, or produced by modern manufacturing practices.


Not a job for a beginner.

Well now, lets not be all jump all over the dude. If I look at this as a piece of sculpture it is doable with some work. First off I'd do some rough forging of the basic blade shape and then perhaps forge weld all those fancy little spikes and horns on, next would come the real work on the danged thing, making all those little spiky bits look nice. Man, would that ever be a lot of hand work for me. I'm sure a lot of you would just get out the 4" hand grinder but me I'm kind of old school and still like to use files for this kind of thing. I know that there may other ways of doing this but that's how as a sculptor I start with it. The hilt and all that other fancy stuff up there could be cast out of silicon bronze. Yeah, I think as a straight piece of art it is no big problem to forge this thing, just time and effort and as blacksmiths that what we are good at, right?

Thank you bentiron for your advice, that will really come in handy. Would it not be possible just to draw out the spikes a little and then spend a while filing them to proper shape? Those two up top I plan on spliting like you would split like a fork with three prongs, the two outside for the two blades and the center one for the tang.


Maillemaker I have done the casting process many times so it will not be new to me and as a matter of fact that is exactly how I was going to make all those decorative little bits on the handle. I know that it would be madness tp even try forge all that decoration. Im an idiot in terms of project choice but im not that stupid.


I have actually spent hours and days planning this, researching how others have done it (and yes others have done it go take a look google is a wondefull place) and in general been preparing myself for this task.


At the moment I am typing this up on my phone as my pc got blown up by lightning not 20 mins ago. So replys and posts will be few and far between till I get my pc fixed.

I definitely see the appeal of trying to make a replica of a cool fantasy sword. I too play WoW (just look at the profile pic), and I too once tried to make a cool fantasy sword, one even simpler than this, out of a leaf spring. I too thought that I would be an exception to needing years of experience and practice. I made a fairly decently sized "Katana," and it actually held up pretty well. It did end up a ton more curved than I intended, the handle was crooked, the bevel was all kinds of screwy, and in short, it wasn't nearly as cool as I thought it would be, as it was a SLO (Sword Like Object) instead of the masterpiece I had in mind. I came on here thinking of finding ideas and inspiration, but along with it came the same feedback you've received. I've gone back to the basics, and learned a lot more from working on smaller projects, still blade smithing related, but smaller; and I'm glad I did. I've learned so much, though there is still a lot left to learn. When I get some time this summer I may consider working on another longer-ish blade (machete lengthed or so), or maybe some pattern welded steel pieces.

Draw A LOT of designs first. You'll probably want to make the guard and skull piece of a separate, mild steel, that will be easy to shape when annealed. Make sure you have all of your measurements and everything for how wide holes need to be for the blade and fittings. If you can make a mold and cast some of the parts, that would help. For the runes on the blade, I would maybe try either using a very small grinder, like a dremel tool, or maybe heating it up and using some punches to get the rough shapes of the runes, then going back and rounding them out with needle files... you will most likely need an assistant to hold the blade while these are punched into the blade. 152ee80cbc

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