The WWI Splash Image Mystery

Posted 23rd Jun 2008 10:00 AM by Flux

From June 21-27, 2008, the week preceding Blizzard’s WWI event in Paris, the Blizzard web team posted a new splash image each night at midnight, on blizzard.com. These images progressed in sequence, and showed what appeared to be a wall of ice. Each day the hole in the ice grew larger, another mysterious rune was added, and faint traces of a demonic face appeared in the opening. In addition, the CSS code of the main Blizzard page contained links to a new hidden image each day; images that turned out to be six pieces of a cartoonish purple penguin.

This article was updated each day during that week, and compiled all the various rumors and wacky theories about the splash images, the hidden images, and what it all meant. Now that the fun is over with, this page provides a summary of events, for posterity.

All the images excerpted on this page, and many more from the week of rumors, can be seen in our Pre-WWI splash screens and hype gallery.

The WWI Logo

Part of the Diablo III anticipation stemmed from this big image; the official WWI artwork. While some saw Diablo’s prominence as a tip off that he’d be the star of the show, others took the opposite approach and concluded that Blizzard was putting big red on the poster as a sort of an apology for not including a Diablo game in their current roster.

wwi08_016.jpg

Splash Screens

With the World Wide Invitational just a few days away, Blizzard commenced posting a new splash screen each day on Blizzard.com. They’ve done this in the past before new game announcements, (but not at any other times), and since the official schedule for the WWI lists just the WoW expansion and Starcraft II, fans are feverishly speculating on what these splash screens could mean, and digging through the clues revealed within them.

Splash Screen #1

The first splash screen, entitled ice1.jpg, went online Monday evening, June 23, 2008. It shows what appears to be a blueish sheet of ice or crystal, but there are some faint symbols visible within the image.

ice1.jpg

Fans quickly focused their attention on the rune in the ice, and began to furiously debate what it might mean. It resembled a rune on a sword from some WoW promotional art, but was also quite close to the Shael and Sur runes from Diablo II.

wwisplashb.jpg

The debate for several days, until sharp-eyed fans noticed that the first rune had been changed after the second day’s image. Not the rune itself, but the cracks in the “ice” that ran behind it were modified, so the rune more clearly matched the one on the Lich King’s sword. It seemed likely that Blizzard meant that rune to represent the one on the WoW sword, and modified it slightly when they saw player analysis and realized it wasn’t as unmistakable as they wanted it to be.


Splash Screen #2

The second splash screen, entitled ice2.jpg, went online Tuesday evening, June 23, 2008. It’s an updated version of the first screen, and clearly the ice is cracking open in the center, as if something beneath it were trying to break through.

ice2.jpg

Another rune was been added, and it clearly matched the Hel rune from Diablo II. What this meant, no one was certain, and debate was still raging over whether the first rune was from WoW or D2.

ice2-hel-rune.jpg?9536


Splash Screen #3

The third splash screen advanced the debate only slightly. The hole in the ice was a bit larger, and it looked like stars could be seen through it, as well as light. Was this an indication that the view was looking up, through some sort of frozen ice floor?

ice3.jpg

The 3rd rune was the easier yet, and was almost immediately identified as the Protoss symbol, as seen on Blizzard’s new Starcraft II site.

rune3-protoss.jpg


Splash Screen 4

The fourth splash screen added a 4th rune, and greatly enlarged the hole in the ice. Some players were sure they saw the shape of a demon’s head in the opening and the smoke, and there are definitely two crescents of stars right where the eyes would go.  Fans superimposed various images on top of it (diablo skull, d2 box, Arthas), but this seemed only to prove that it was possible to resize any image of a face and get it to fit the hole in the ice and the two “eyes” visible within.

ice4.jpg

The Rune was the most mysterious yet, and there is still no consensus over what exactly it was meant to represent.

  • It’s symbolic; the first 3 runes represented the 3 Blizzard game worlds, and this rune just shows them together, orbiting in the same solar system.
  • It represents the Arcane Sanctum, a building seen in the Warcraft 2 and 3 games.
  • It represents Pax Imperia, a game Blizzard worked on, but did not release.
  • It represents The Lost Vikings, an old Blizzard title made for the console and recently re-released for new platforms.
  • It’s a sign that the new game announcement will combine elements of all 3of Blizzard’s game worlds.

Splash Screen 5

The fifth splash screen added more detail to the “face” through the ice, but the visage was still ambiguous enough that the debate grew yet more heated.

ice5.jpg


The fifth rune was another ambiguous icon. The 4 lines overlapping into a sort of eight-pointed star is a familiar icon, commonly found on compasses and maps, and used in numerous video and computer games. It looked like a snowflake, and was widely thought to be a reference to Blizzard. It also matched an icon from Blizzard’s The Lost Vikings game, as seen here.

There were numerous theories at this point, but with almost unanimous agreement that the first three icons matched WoW, D2, and SC2, only the 4th and 5th runes were contentious.

  • [*]The 4th was a reference to all games from all 3 Blizzard game worlds appearing at the WWI, and the 5th was a reference to the company itself.
  • All 5 runes represented different Blizzard games; the 4th was Pax Imperium and the 5th was Lost Vikings.

It’s not clear, even now, which theory, if either, was correct. Both fit the available evidence fairly well. The main point against the first is that the 5th “blizzard” rune is largely irrelevant or redundant. The main point against the “five games” theory is that the first 3 runes proceeded in chronological order, and then the 4th and 5th were well out of it. Furthermore, it seems odd to put up the big 3 blizzard games first, and then follow with 2 others so old and obscure that most fans don’t remember them.


Splash Screen 5.5

Friday night brought a sixth splash screen, entitled “icefiveandahalf.jpg”  It was no different than ice5.jpg, except that the 5 runes were glowing, the face in the hole was more defined, and a 6th non-glowing rune, of a winking smiley face, was added on the top right.

ice5-5.jpg

To some players, this cinched it. The 5 glowing icons were an obvious reference to the 5 seals that had to be activated in the Chaos Sanctuary, in Act Four, to make Diablo appear in Diablo II. Others still argued alternate theories, but most of our readers (who were admittedly pulling for Diablo III all along) were convinced.

The happy news came a few hours later, when the WWI kicked off in Paris, and Diablo III was announced. There was no seventh splash screen, and the sixth was replaced with a flash animation announcing Diablo III.

Hidden Purple Mystery Beast

In addition to the splash images, Blizzard inserted clues into the CSS source of the splash image page, clues that pointed to additional images on their server. There was one image added with each splash image, and together they formed the cartoon image of an ugly purple penguin. There’s still debate about what this thing is; the D3 team didn’t know when asked at the WWI, so quite possibly it’s just an inside joke by the Blizzard web team. It doesn’t seem to have any relevance to Diablo III, at any rate.

We didn’t know that at the time though, and with the hidden images and their mysterious names to fuel them, theories multiplied like mushrooms after a rain. The letters and file names were revealed in the following order:

  • 04.jpg = Tundra
  • 15.jpg = Cavern
  • 23.jpg = Icy
  • 16.jpg = Cold
  • 08.jpg = Harbinger
  • 42.jpg = Evilpenguin

The first popular theory was that the names of the images corresponded to letters of the alphabet, in a simple alphanumeric code. A=1, Z=26. This seemed quite probable with the first two letters, which were D and O. Diablo? That theory died the next day when the 3rd letter was W, but that created new theories (see Michael Dashow’s walrus below).  The 4th letter was P, touching off a brief rash of “Powder” theories, but later that day someone realized the six numbers were almost certainly the six magical numbers from the TV show “Lost.”

This didn’t settle any arguments, since the whole point of those numbers on the show is that they have multiple mystical kismet-like meanings. But it did seem to disprove any alphanumeric connection to the numbers, and led most players to assume we’d see an 8 and a 42 next. And we did, seemingly confirming that the numbers were taken from Lost; a show of which Blizzard employees are known to be fans.


Another theory about the numbers is that they spelled out a secret phrase when the two digits were converted to letter values in CSS code.  This yielded the following, up through the first four letters, when the theory had its greatest potential.

  • Class 1: TUNDRA (04.jpg) -> 0 = T | 4 = R
  • Class 2: GLACIER (15.jpg) -> 1 = L | 5 = E
  • Class 3: ICY (23.jpg) -> 2 = Y | 3 = I
  • Class 4: COLD (16.jpg) -> 1 = O | 6 = L

This gave the letters TYREILO, which enterprising players quickly rearranged into the phrase: TYR_EL I_ LO__ (TYRAEL IS LOST). This tied in nicely with the presumption that the plot of Diablo III would center on the archangel Tyrael.

Sadly for this theory, the next two image names did not yield letters that would be slotted into this phrase. Ironically, the “Tyrael is lost” phrase actually does match a major element of the Diablo III plot, as revealed at the WWI. Tyrael has not been seen or heard from since he destroyed the Worldstone at the end of D2X, and as far as the humans in the story are concerned, he is lost. Whether this is just a weird coincidence, or was something the Blizzard guys thought of and encouraged with the order they elected to release the images in, may never be known.

Whether the names and numbers meant nothing or anything, the final image was at last assembled, and you can see it here.

purple-full-labeled.jpg

Jormungar?

This monster from some WoW concept art looked like a potential match for the purple beast after the 2nd day, but with the third image it was no longer a realistic possibility.

Michael Dashow’s Walrus

Even less likely than Jormungar was this cartoonish walrus; the iconic image of ex-Blizzard North artist Michael Dashow. Mike was a key artist on D2, designing the Barbarian and Sorceress, along with several monsters, but he left the company in 2005. Even if he’d never left, or had returned at some point, there was never any logical reason advanced why his name, or especially his purple walrus, would be revealed by the hidden splash images.




Bookmark and Share

Comments

Page 1 of 20 pages  1 2 3 >  Last »
Severoth
Posted 23, Jun 2008 12:34 PM
(0)
 

Every day a shard of ice will drop away, similar to how each day prior to Starcraft we moved through a game?

Final day Diablo 3?

*prays*

Reply
 
skyjuice
Posted 23, Jun 2008 03:51 PM
(0)
 

[QUOTE=Severoth;6562260]Every day a shard of ice will drop away, similar to how each day prior to Starcraft we moved through a game?

Final day Diablo 3?

*prays*

There are red glyphs right behind the ice. :coffee:

Reply
 
humblegar
Posted 23, Jun 2008 04:06 PM
(0)
 

I really don’t see how a release date for wotlk warrants a teaser for a blizzcon.

My bet is d3 or something totally new.

Reply
 
TopHatCat64
Posted 23, Jun 2008 04:12 PM
(0)
 

Hmm…a blue color scheme would certainly be a change for the Diablo franchise. It would work for the speculated “battle in heaven” some people have suggested.

Reply
 
NASE
Posted 23, Jun 2008 04:35 PM
(0)
 

There are more then enough reason why it can be linked to diablo.  It’s not because it’s blue now that it will stay blue.  Once the ice melts, we will see what is really up.

1.10 was the hell is frozen over patch - with all three prime evils kind of dead, hell gets knock back to the stone age.  Though some evil - red flames - it still present.

Could be with the worldstone that is destroyed, that mounts arreat isn’t heated anymore, why would they.  Thus everything freeze though still some aspects stay alive.

It could be pre the discovery of the worldstone.  Due to the cold and harsh climate…

Reply
 
Dafu
Posted 23, Jun 2008 05:01 PM
(0)
 

Sure it looks like ice, heavily suggesting Wrath of the Lich King. But is saying that this might be part of the Worldstone (last cinematic in D2) that big of a stretch? Although the Worldstone was red in D2, but if you look closely there is a red glow behind the ice as well…

Also whats that circular symbol at mid left of the image?

Reply
 
LifeAfterDeath
Posted 23, Jun 2008 05:44 PM
(0)
 

lol. I think the image means Hell has frozen over…

Reply
 
Booner
Posted 23, Jun 2008 06:26 PM
(0)
 

Hey all!! I’ve just recently gotten back into Diablo 2 after the new patch was released. I’m very excited for Diablo 3 to be announced (hopefully :yes:). Anyways, I was snooping around the old Diablo 2 website and found something that could be related to the mysterious new Blizzard site pic:

http://i279.photobucket.com/albums/kk141/Boonerang42/ice1.jpg

http://i279.photobucket.com/albums/kk141/Boonerang42/HellFrozenOver-text-640x.jpg

As you can see, the wallpaper was made in 2003, about the about time that Blizz shut down Blizz North and started work on the new project. Could this be a hint about the new story line of D3? Is it going to take place in a frozen wasteland? I could be nothing, and I maybe I’m just a little too excited for D3, but it just seems weird that if Blizzard’s mysterious pic was related to WotLK, they’d put a WoW logo on it or something. Anyways, I was just speculating… :scratchchin:

Reply
 
Kiroptus
Posted 23, Jun 2008 06:39 PM
(0)
 

Yeah I thought about that as well. I have seen that Wallpaper and whenever “Frozen” and “Diablo” combines I think about that.

Still I guess I will play on the pessimist side here, I really do think its about WotLK. Probably a close up on the magical ice block where the lich king’s armor was held. Even the central glow inside reminds me of that. And the way certain lines of the ice are drawn reminds me of the Wacraft style.

*sigh* Its sad but I think WWI might come without any D3 announcement.

Reply
 
Zeek
Posted 23, Jun 2008 07:18 PM
(0)
 

Hmmm that’s fairly convincing.  Though I’m still not sold.  The one leading up to SC2 was about all their previous games and then finally SC2.  Maybe they’re going to tease us with lich king and starcraft 2 images and then on the day of the announcement slam us with D3.

Reply
 
Page 1 of 20 pages  1 2 3 >  Last »

Syndicate