Welcome to Gagetzan Times second issue. This month, journey with Jetsett Spannerwork as he visits the Searing Gorge. Auntie Fizzle has returned with more advice for those who ask her aid. Our readers send in feedback on articles from the first edition and a gnomish engineer sounds off.
In addition to our regular features, this month we have an informative article, courtesy of Fara Boltbreaker, about the history of magic. We also have a interview with the humorous and insightful Marah, an elder troll mage. Lastly, we've spoken with the Servants of Azora about what life is like for non-magi who live and work for magi.
Gadgetzan Times' own reporter Fara Boltbreaker goes out and gets the scoop on the history of magic and magi in Azeroth. Sitting in on a meeting in the library in Ironforge, she reports back to us the lessons learned from the magi. Take a moment to learn a bit more about the often mysterious, disaster-riddled history of magic in Azeroth.
Fara Boltbreaker braves the wilds of the desert region of Durotar to bring us the words of Marah, an elder troll mage who spends her time counselling and helping new mages. Take a moment to read what Marah has to say.
A bit about Marah: Marah is an elder troll mage, living and working around southern Durotar. She spends time helping out young magi-in-training with advice on how to survive in today's rough and tumble world.
The air sizzles as arcane energy flows through it. All at once the sky is too bright to look at and too dark to see. The raw, channeled energy surges past, and the great mage calls forth the power to his fingertips. His hands glow and the energy swells to bursting point and just as you think the world will explode he utters a word of power and the energy is released. The mage, exhausted from the effort, smiles happily with a sense of achievement, then sits down to eat his newly conjured sandwich.