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Hozen
File:Grook Fu Master.jpg
Faction/Affiliation Independent, Horde
Racial leader(s) Neutral IconSmall MonkeyKing The Monkey King
Horde IconSmall Hozen Chief Kah Kah
Tribal chieftains
Racial mount IconSmall Goat Goat
IconSmall SiberianTiger Tiger
IconSmall Bat Bat
Homeworld Azeroth
Area(s) Pandaria, The Wandering Isle
Language(s) Hozen, Mogu[1]
Organization(s) Clans

The hozen (sometimes known as hozu)[2][3] are a monkey-like race that lives in Pandaria.[4] Short-lived and immature, they are a passionate and playful race, mischievous pranksters that "act like a group of 14 year old boys running around together in the jungle."[5] The hozen are native to Pandaria, and are found all over the continent.

Mostly a wild and independent race, hostile to any who wander into their hunting grounds, one tribe of forest hozen were befriended by the Horde after adventurers earned their grudging respect. Equipped with machine guns and weapons from the Horde, this hozen tribe were trained and recruited to join the battle against the Alliance and their new allies.

Background

The hozen are uncannily dexterous foragers and hunters who dwell in clans among treetops and mountains of Pandaria. They are a simple race driven by their passions.[6]

The hozen are a short-lived race. Their elders are typically no more than twenty years old,[7] usually fourteen or fifteen,[8] and few hozen survive past their twentieth birthday.[8] As a result, their relative maturity when compared to the other speaking races is quite minimal[7] and their society lacks roots (and rules) as a result. Uncouth and impulsive, hozen nonetheless play, live and squabble together…at least until their clans grow so large that they collapse into multiple smaller groups.[9]

A typical hozen.

In contrast to the very reserved and polite jinyu, the hozen are a passionate people that love to love, love to hate, and love to feel any emotion they can feel, as long as they feel it strongly.[7]

Hozen love to hunt and fish, and often will assault anyone and anything in their hunting grounds.[6] The other races of Pandaria are therefore careful to avoid these areas, but this is often not enough to avoid conflict. The hozen's notoriously short tempers grow even shorter when their hunger pushes entire clans, including elderly and young hozen, to ravage food sources outside of their territory, either gathering enough food or seeing enough hozen die in the process to ensure the survivors’ continued health.[9]

Hozen skulls are often found scattered among their huts and campfires. Jinyu collect hozen skulls as prized tokens, and use them to perform ceremonial rites; the older the skull, the more potent its magic.[10] Hozen are known to keep and tame tigers,[11][12] although they have also been known to be preyed upon by tigers,[13] as well as by crocolisks.[14] Hozen seem to live on a diet composed mostly of fish, or as they call them, "slickies", and sometimes catch them using bait made from bugs' legs.[15]

The Jade Forest's mountain hozen fear the venomous Grove Vipers and often hunt them out of pure spite.[16]

Kun-Lai Summit

The hozen of the Kun-Lai mountains are unusually aggressive, even by hozen standards. Food and supplies are often scarce in this hostile terrain. When times are hard, the hozen leadership may declare a "ravage" on nearby settlements. During a ravage, every hozen strong enough to walk joins in on a massive swarm attack on nearby villages. In this way, they ensure they either acquire enough food to last the winter, or they lose enough of their weakest to ensure their current supplies are enough.

For years, the Shado-Pan and grummles have maintained an uneasy peace with the hozen in exchange for food tributes. Fear of the Shado-Pan keeps the local tribes in check... Usually.[17]

What's in a name name?

Hozen have a rite of passage for their people that celebrates martial skill. Most hozen respect good fighters, or good "grookers" as they say. Those that have shown their strength in battle earn their "name name". Instead of being addressed by their name once, they are addressed by their name twice, and this is shown as a title of respect.[18]

Combat

Some young and rambunctious hozen are trained from an early age to use boxing gloves so they don't accidentally kill their tribe members, and more importantly, to keep them from picking their noses.[19] The hozen rely on dirty guerrilla tactics. Ambushes and traps. They are able to swing and leap from tree to tree and use thick trees for cover.[20] Hozen sometimes take prisoners, keeping them in bamboo cages.[21]

Speech

See also: Hozen (language)

The language of the hozen is steeped in mystery. While the majority of the hozen are able to speak in a common language they often include an assortment of other sounds and "words" that have yet to be translated by other races. Most jinyu scholars believe these additional words to be uncharitable or offensive in nature, but the matter is far from closed. To quote the Great Sage Ook Ook, "You can take the derk out of the jib, but you shouldn't put the jib in the derk."[22]

As well as using words from their own language, when speaking in a common tongue hozens' speech is notable for its unusual use and combination of words in the listener's language. Listed below are a few examples:

  • Beast-Haver[23] = stable master, or one who looks after animals
  • Bed-Haver[24] = innkeeper
  • Fishripper[25] = possibly 'warrior', in reference to these hozen's perennial combat with the jinyu
  • Fish-Getter[26] = fisherman
  • Flapmaster[27] = flight master
  • Furrymaster[28] = beast/tiger master, possibly stable master
  • Keg-Haver[29][30] = keeper of the keg
  • Mudseer[31] = unknown
  • Soupmaster[32] = chef or cook in charge of making soup
  • Spooky-dooks[33] = constipation (combining the hozen word 'dook', meaning feces, with the non-hozen word 'spooky'; "Dooks get scared sometimes, don't wanna come out.")
  • Stickypaw[34] = possibly 'thief' or 'looter'

As shown above, hozen seem to use many normal words from common languages as titles (or even a kind of surname) for themselves. Even when the combination of words is easily translated into a role or profession, its use is distinctly hozen:

History

During the Age of a Hundred Kings, several races settled in the land surrounding the Vale of Eternal Blossoms, the hozen among them. The bold and mischievous monkey-men came to inhabit the dense jungles surrounding the vale.[39]

Long ago, only a few years before the War of the Ancients, a hozen known only as the Monkey King had become the leader of an ungovernable people. He had risen to power without spilling a single drop of blood and was beloved by every hozen tribe, despite that hozen fought endlessly, constantly, for the simplest reasons. Any disagreement meant physical violence, but the Monkey King knew this. So he told the hozen tribes, "I am the Monkey King. Your tribe supports me with all its heart." When a single hozen would question him, he would tell them that their tribe's leader had already agreed to it. No hozen wanted to challenge their leader on a whim--and be in a fight--so they declared, "You are the Monkey King." When the tribe leaders learned his name, all of their subjects were already calling him the Monkey King. They were confused, but they did not want to fight their people, so they did not challenge him either. The Monkey King's wild claim, his lie, eventually became true because nobody dared to disagree with it. Soon tribal fighting had ceased. The Monkey King passed judgment on all disputes and the hozen obeyed.[40]

The hozen have been at war with the jinyu for a very long time.[5] At some point long ago the hozen approached them for help; the jinyu felt sorry for them and taught them how to survive. The jinyu gave them their trust, but over time the hozen grew strong and bold and began taking the land for their own.[41] During Lei Shen's conquest of Pandaria, both the hozen and the jinyu agreed to help the other withstand the onslaught of Lei Shen and his mogu armies. However, on the eve of the jinyu's final stand against the mogu, the hozen betrayed them, having secretly made a pact with the Thunder King in exchange for preferential treatment (a promise that was never kept). The hozen's betrayal ensured the defeat of the jinyu and created a bitter rivalry between the two races that would last for centuries.[42]

Facing the hozen's "dirty guerilla tactics", the jinyu are outwitted by the hozen at every turn. The hozen are vastly superior on land, especially in areas with thick tree cover, but the jinyu have a strong advantage on or near water, allowing them to defend Pearlfin Village.[20] The jinyu consider the hozen "careless, filthy beasts".[10]

The hozen took part in the pandaren revolution, covertly digging tunnels that would lead them behind the mogu defenses.[43]

Types

There are jungle hozen and mountain hozen, the heartier kind,[5] and Forest Hozen.[6] According to the Monkey King there are also sky hozen.[44]

While most hozen are hostile, there are some of the less wild forest hozen that have made themselves homes amongst the pandaren, often acting as farm hands, or merchants. A hozen can even start their own proper farm in The Heartland if they want to. Some have begun training in Tian Monastery in the Jade Forest. Such individuals are accepted on their personal merits, and there is no prejudice placed on them by the pandaren due to the actions of their species as a whole.

Two hozen with wings, Ginger-Ginger and Flap-Flap, can be found in Zuldazar. When asked how they acquired wings, the Monkey King responds "There are many secrets both mysterious and divine, you have yours and I have mine." They are presumably the sky hozen that the Monkey King mentioned.[44]

Notable

Name Role Affiliation Status Location
Neutral IconSmall MonkeyKing The Monkey King Companion of Emperor Shaohao Pandaren Empire Alive Various Locations
Horde IconSmall Hozen Chief Gukgut Leader of the Forest Hozen at the Slingtail Pits Forest Hozen Killable Slingtail Pits, Jade Forest
Horde IconSmall Hozen Chief Kah Kah Chief of Grookin Hill Forest Hozen Alive Grookin Hill, Jade Forest
Mob IconSmall Hozen Chief Yip-Yip Member of the Kunzen tribe Kunzen tribe Killable Kunzen Cave, Valley of the Four Winds
Mob IconSmall Hozen Dook Ookem Leader of the Forest Hozen forces in the northwestern Jade Forest Forest Hozen Killable Jade Forest
Neutral IconSmall Hozen Emperor Rikktik Emperor of Pandaria Pandaren Empire (presumed) Deceased Emperor Rikktik's Rest, Kun-Lai Summit
Neutral IconSmall Hozen Ken-Ken Monk of Tian Monastery Tian Monastery Alive Various Locations
Mob IconSmall Hozen Konk Leader of the hozen hooligans who attacked Zin'Jun Forest Hozen Killable Nook of Konk, Jade Forest
Neutral IconSmall Hozen Mokimo the Strong Caretaker of the Shrine of Two Moons Golden Lotus Alive Golden Terrace, Shrine of Two Moons
Neutral IconSmall Hozen Mung-Mung Tillers farmhand Tillers Alive Heartland, Valley of the Four Winds
Boss IconSmall Hozen Ook-Ook Led a hozen incursion in Stormstout Brewery Unknown Killable Stormstout Brewhall, Stormstout Brewery
Horde IconSmall Hozen Riko Forest Hozen who acted as guide to the Horde invaders Forest Hozen, Orgrimmar Alive Grookin Hill, Jade Forest; Durotar
Mob IconSmall Hozen Ruk-Ruk Chief of the Fe-Feng tribe Fe-Feng tribe Killable Fe-Feng Village, Wandering Isle
Mob IconSmall Hozen Tak Tak High Leader Chief of the Broketooth tribe Broketooth tribe Killable Camp Broketooth, Kun-Lai Summit
Horde IconSmall Hozen Tak-Tak Domination Point kite flyer Dominance Offensive Alive Domination Point, Krasarang Wilds
Mob IconSmall Hozen The Ook of Dook Leader of the Ookin tribe Ookin tribe Killable Dooker Dome, Kun-Lai Summit
Horde IconSmall Hozen Tooki Tooki Leader of the Forest Hozen at Camp Nooka Nooka Forest Hozen Alive Camp Nooka Nooka, Jade Forest
Neutral IconSmall Hozen Zhi-Zhi Trainee at Tian Monastery Tian Monastery Alive Tian Monastery, Jade Forest

Tribes

Wisdom

The following are notes of wisdom proclaimed by the wisest of hozen on the Wandering Isle:

  • Wet fur not fun to sleep on.
  • Mouth only hole that banana go in.
  • Don't pull own tail when there are other tails to pull.
  • Poo not good to eat, but very good to throw.
  • Firecracker for throwing, banana for eating.
  • Peel banana first, eat second.

Hozen 'wisdom' can also be found recorded on scrolls in the form of Hai-pu.

Lore

Hozen lore can be discovered through the following lore objects, hidden throughout Pandaria:

Discovering all of these objects will earn the achievement Achievement faction lorewalkers [Hozen in the Mist], and initiate the Quest:Hozen in the Mist quest, inviting the player to visit Lorewalker Cho, who will tell the player a short story about the hozen.

As a companion pet

Notes

  • During BlizzCon 2011, these creatures were known as the hozu. Hozu (猴族, hóuzú) is Chinese for "monkey clan."
  • While normal hozen have unique animations, winged hozen use felbat animations.

Gallery

References

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