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The humans became ringwraithes, because they were easily corruptible, I think.

The elves didn't because they made their own rings. Or at least I'm assuming that's the reason they didn't. As far as I know, Sauron actually never came into contact with the elve's rings so he could never corrupt them.

Why didn't the dwarves become ringwraithes?

Is it because dwarves are more resistant to magic then the other races? That's the case in the Warhammer universe, I'm not sure if it's the same in Middle Earth.

Edlothiad
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Daft
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  • Also: http://scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/28294/why-did-the-dwarven-rings-of-power-cause-greed and http://scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/74396/dwarf-rings-unaccounted-for/74429#74429 – DVK-on-Ahch-To Feb 12 '15 at 19:19
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    @DVK Do all those questions answer mine? – Daft Feb 12 '15 at 19:20
  • yes, the two in DVK's final comment answer your question, especially http://scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/28294/why-did-the-dwarven-rings-of-power-cause-greed – KutuluMike Feb 12 '15 at 19:26
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    @MichaelEdenfield cheers! The Dwarves indeed proved hard to tame, ... nor can they be turned to shadows. Much appreciated! – Daft Feb 12 '15 at 19:28

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