Warhammer orcs and Warhammer 40k orks are way cooler than Tolkein's goblins and uruk-hai. They're also fungal based and grow in proportion to how much stuff they kill.
1) who is Tolkein?
2) BLASPHEMY!
3) *insert random item name here*z: The reason why I hate orcs in warhammer
4) BLASPHEMY!
To say on topic:
All I can really say is... Yes, Lord of the Rings was a good story. It made for a really cool movie recently, too. Now can we move on, and maybe give fantasy story writers a little more freedom? It's been, what, seventy five years? Maybe we can move out of the shadows of LotR, and introduce some creativity and innovation along with our "inspired by" or "homages to" or "blatantly ripping off" Tolkien? (The lines between all three of those being very blurry, and up for personal interpretation...)
In fact, all of fantasy seems to follow an arc like this, using ==> to represent the train of "inspiration" and/or "barely evading copyright violation".
Original Norse myth and folktale ==> epic 12th century poem "Nibelungenlied" plus inspiration from Greek tragedy ==> The Ring of Nibelung (Wagnerian Opera "
Tetralogy of the Ring") ==> Lord of the Rings ==> Old D&D ==> Warhammer ==> Warcraft ==> 4th ed D&D
You know, some things about this game are just plain based off of LotR, and OK, fine, but you know what? The things that make this game stand out are the parts that
aren't the same homage to the same books everyone else has been writing an homage to for the better part of the past century.
Killing cannibal elves with magma is
our thing. That's what makes it cool and unique. Playing with dwarves all by itself is not particularly unique. I've been playing as dwarves since I was 4 years old, playing the AD&D games on the Commodore 64.
Just having dwarves isn't particularly cool and unique, but having dwarves that use a drawbridge to fling goblins into a pit filled with tamed sea serpents is cool. Mermaid fisheries are delightfully amoral. Undead skeletal whales climbing up from a well to eat your mayor is a surprising and humorous twist on the old story.
I'm not saying we have to reject everything Tolkien did, but maybe we could try requiring more reasoning for putting something into a story than just "Tolkien did it", and maybe ask that people follow up with "and this will make the story better because..."