As one of the saga’s most riveting concepts, the towering Qunari are carefully poised to take their place in the spotlight ofDragon Age: Dreadwolf– where the setting of Tevinter finally brings the unique pathos of the Qunari people closer to home. Though they only became aplayable race inDragon Age: Inquisition, the backlash against the removal of race options in the secondDragon Agegame may well have ensured that BioWare will give players the option inDreadwolfno matter what.

The potential of playing as Qunari in the heart of the Qun’s most hated foe is an enticing prospect for players, albeit a daunting one for the writers ofDragon Age: Dreadwolf. to examine the circumstances that could make a playableQunari protagonist inDreadwolfa homerun for BioWare, it would be best to start at their origins.

sten dragon age origins arishok featured

RELATED:Dragon Age: Dreadwolf Won’t Require Playing the Original Trilogy to Understand

How Dragon Age: Origins and Its Sequel Handled the Qunari

Dragon Ageplayers have strong opinions about the Qunari warrior Sten, introduced in the first game long beforeDragon Age: Dreadwolf. Be they positive or negative, the perception of Sten’s ironclad principles represented a player’s first window into the rigid, utilitarian culture of the Qun, founded by Koslun on Par Volen.

Those who follow the teachings of the Qun have no personal identity, no family, and no romantic unions. Despite this, theHero of Ferelden can earn the respect of Stenover the course of their shared journey, earning the title “basalit-an”. No matter how strong the friendship develops between the pair, Sten remains a devoted follower of the Qun and regretfully warns the Hero of Ferelden that the Antaam – the army of the Qunari led by the Arishok – will eventually march south in a war of conversion.

iron bull dragon age inquisition featured qunari

The sequel toDragon Age: Originstook the Qunari further by making them a centerpiece in the colorful tapestry of plots that make upHawke’s time in Kirkwall. It introduces the irritable Arishok and his vanguard, marooned in Kirkwall’s harbor while on the search for the stolen tome of Koslun. Over the years, many political factions try to take advantage of the Qunari’s arrival to further their agenda. These plots of subterfuge and scheming eventually provoke the Arishok into declaring war against Kirkwall, seizing the city with ease, and decapitating its viscount.

Though in most cases Hawke defeats the Arishok and becomes Champion of Kirkwall, the plot’s purpose lies in establishing the irreconcilable differences betweenthe Qun and the other cultures of Thedas. It offers purpose and comfort to the downtrodden at the cost of personal freedom and identity; the Qun’s mages live a life of even heavier chains than those from the Circle of Magi. With the stage set, BioWare entersDragon Age: Inquisitionby introducing the companion of Iron Bull and making the Qunari playable for the first time in franchise history.

dreadwolf qunari companion dragon age featured rogue

RELATED:BioWare Community Update Dives into Dragon Age: Dreadwolf’s Storytelling, In-Game Lore

The Qunari of Dragon Age: Inquisition and Setting the Stage

One of the windfalls that sprung fromInquisition’s extended production was the opportunity to make playable Qunari into a reality. Players could choose to make their Herald of Andraste a Vashoth – someone who had been born outside the Qun, but still belonged to the horned race of giants from Par Volen. In their quest to close the Breach and restore the Veil, the players were joined by anotherQunari called Iron Bull.

Leading a mercenary company as a cover, Iron Bull was actually called Hissrad, and was an agent of the Qunari’s espionage branch known as the Ben-Hassrath. He represented a reliable connection to Par Volen for the Inquisitor, and depending on player choices, could either turn away from the Qun and become an enemy to his people called Tal-Vashoth or betray the Inquisitor once the Qunari Conspiracy kicked off in the game’s final hours.

Over the course ofInquisition, players would discover that the Dread Wolf himself was terrified of the prospect of the Qun converting Thedas, and held great contempt for the Qunari ideology. Though he possessed an agenda of his own, he would nonetheless help the Inquisitor thwart the Qunari plot to assassinate the leadership of the southern states of Thedas and gain converts from the resulting chaos. In the wake of the failed conspiracy, the Antaam launched a new assault on the Imperium unsanctioned by the rest of the Qunari, capturing the cities of Ventus, Neromenian, and Carastes. The war crimes perpetrated in the city of Ventus galvanized even greater support for the Tevinter war against the Qunari, setting the stage for theevents ofDragon Age: Dreadwolf.

A Qunari Protagonist in Dreadwolf Could Rival The Elven Inquisitor

The plot ofDragon Age: Inquisitiondelved into the lore of the Ancient Elves through Solas and the Dread Wolf, offering riveting insight intohow warped the Dalish legends were. Though a playthrough ofInquisitionas any race was valid in its own right for its own reasons, an Elven Inquisitor gave the game’s story a unique set of personal stakes, and an intimacy to many of its lore reveals that the other races lacked. The first Inquisitor himself was an elf of the Dales, a fact scrubbed from the history books by the Chantry in the years that followed the Exalted March.

Furthermore, to be an elf in southern Thedas often meant living as a second-class citizen. Distrusted in Orlais, Ferelden, and even the Free Marches, mostelves inDragon Ageeither lived a miserable existence in an Alienage or an isolated one among the Dalish – and just as it was with the Hero of Ferelden, so too was the elven Inquisitor shaped by these circumstances. In fact, Solas, Sera, and the Inquisitor formed a perfect trio depicting the collective tragedy the elven people suffered over the centuries, and they were each rebelling against those circumstances in their own way.

It was due to this suffering that the Dread Wolf was able to construct his vast network of spies, as his dream of rebuilding the ancient world of the Elves appeals to all those who had been wronged at the hands of humans and their cruelty. However,northern Thedas and the Tevinter Imperiumis a different beast altogether, and the current climate has shifted away from the Elves and onto the Qunari.

To be Vashoth in Tevinter likely means discrimination and distrust on a scale that rivals or even surpasses that of being an elf. GivenDragon Age: Dreadwolf’s setting and plot, it would be a missed opportunity if players weren’t allowed to explore this dynamic up-close as a Qunari protagonist. Furthermore, one of the game’s rumored companions is afemale Qunari rogue, though as yet, her allegiance remains unknown.

As the Dread Wolf attempts to enact his plot to merge the Fade with the world of Thedas, the chaos of the Tevinter and Qunari war will no doubt take the stage as its most important secondary conflict. The sequel toInquisitionmay well decide the fate of the Qun regime, as its marching armies contrast against the peaceful Vashoth in Tevinter. Where being an elf in Inquisition took players into the heart of the conflict in a personal way, playing as Qunari might end up doing the same in its sequel. Though the game has yet to reveal more of its plot,Dragon Age: Dreadwolfhas entered alphastage, which hopefuly means more reveals in the near future.

Dragon Age: Dreadwolfis in development.

MORE:Dragon Age Dreadwolf Should Tap Into Unique Class Specializations for Each Race