Especially when we know the character of the game pulled Warcraft III. By itself it represents almost the quintessence of the universe of Blizzard, this is also not for nothing that the third expansion to World of Warcraft, which was dedicated to him was the most anticipated at its output. The book is easy to read, it is quickly plunged into the heart of the torment of the young Prince. Unfortunately, the story follows a little too literally the story already told in Warcraft III came out in 2003, except for the first part of the book that depicts the loves in new ways, beliefs and desires of Arthas, the still seems to copy and paste the game. As long as one has made Warcraft III, the book becomes almost boring. I almost believe it when they started talking about the origins of Frostmourne but in the end it is not so any more detail than some poor lines, which is regrettable. In the end, the charm works because the universe is excellent, to be detestable character is delightfully powerful, and the promptings of the Runeblade haunt us to the point that we will not win until the final verdict. Note that there is a lot of spelling errors and replaced words that affect the understanding of certain paragraphs. Too often repeated words (translation errors?), I think of "nodded" or "snorted" appearing a total of 30 times each minimum on the whole the book. It's weird when you're used to reading great authors of the genre.