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Monday, March 6, 2017

Blizzard eSports team are “very interested” in WoW PvE as a competitive environment

This will be good news for Method, Serenity and Exorsus as they continue to fight for the top spot, but may come a little late. Several guilds have announced their intention to stop raiding in Legion, citing the grind, which doesn’t look to be getting much better come 7.2. Even Danish Terrace, one of the guilds hitting targets and building a fanbase in Legion, have hung up the damage meters.


As for how Blizzard might implement it, no announcements yet. “We've been doing the live raid races for a long time, just to see which team can do it better - that's still competitive. It's not your traditional eSports where it's two teams head to head, the dungeon races is another one. Even though you're not going head to head with another player, I think that's exciting to see.

“We have experimented last year and we're going to continue to experiment this year. Now, whether or not we make it a big program with prize money and all of that stuff - I don't think that's the only thing that defines eSports anymore. For me, eSports is just being able to watch to see who the best is at something.”

Phan and Blizzard are well aware of the challenges surrounding it too, with new raid content being the most interesting but also the most competitive when it comes to strategies and secrecy. “I think it is important to make sure, at the end of the day, there is integrity in the competitive landscape,” she continues, pointing out that ‘tournament servers’ are becoming much more popular for having a consistent environment for players to compete in. Something like that may work for WoW PvE too.

If and when it happens, it’ll take some time to get it right. “I think in order to support it more widely, especially if it's going to be big and successful, we always start off with a test, see how it goes, do some broadcasts on it, get the feedback from everyone - do they enjoy watching it, is it fun to watch? Do we have the tools in place in able to support it?

Monday, February 6, 2017

How a guild of deaf players conquered World of Warcraft's toughest raids

Joseph Antle has raided World of Warcraft for a long time. His first guild was called Blackguard in vanilla, and he carved his way through Molten Core, Blackwing Lair, and Ahn’Qiraj with his trusty Tauren hunter. “I can’t recall if I was any good back then, but I have a memory of accidentally pulling Hakkar and wiping the entire group,” he says. “The team wasn’t too pleased with me, but I got over it.”
                 

You can’t understate the coordination demanded by high-tier Warcraft raids. You and 24 friends are the only things standing in front of a boss deemed too difficult for the vast majority of the player base. Each encounter cycles through four or five central mechanics that need to be handled perfectly. If you do something dumb, like forget you’re the living bomb, or stumble through the Flame Wreath, or accidentally aggro the Blood God Hakkar, you’re looking at a long walk back from the graveyard.

Most serious raiding guilds use voice chat to bark orders or refine strategy between wipes. In an age of Discord, built-in microphones, and automatic audio channels, connecting with your fellow players outside the chat box is easier than ever. But Antle is deaf, and wasn’t afforded the luxury of coordinating over voice comms. He still plucked ultra-rare loot off of Warcraft’s fiercest horrors, but his experience was far more isolated—the only guy in the group left out of all the jokes.

A small community of deaf players who knew each other outside WoW formed the Undaunted guild (known until recently as Durus Veritas) in the spring of 2011. All of them had experience raiding, and wanted to use their skills to clear high-end Warcraft encounters without voice chat. And they were successful, progressing through the stringent demands of Cataclysm, Mists of Pandaria, and Warlords of Draenor. On January 15, 2017, they cleared the Emerald Nightmare on the highest difficulty—the first major raid of the Legion cycle.

Antle was recruited into Undaunted in 2013 by a close friend who needed a DPS for their alternative 10-man team. Today he’s guild master, playing a Blood Elf protection paladin.

Monday, January 2, 2017

World of Warcraft to be the only game featured in Californian exhibit on world-changing tech

The Computer History Museum in California, USA, will be featuring Blizzard's long-running MMO, World of Warcraft, in an exhibit based around software that's changed the world. It will be the only game featured.
             

The 'Make Software: Change the World' exhibition "explores the impact of software on the lives of people everywhere, through seven game-changing applications", says the official site.

Visitors will be taught about the creators of the tech, as well as learn about the users whose lives have been impacted by their release.

As well as World of Warcraft, the exhibit features interactive displays and multimedia information blasts on technology such as car crash simulations, Photoshop, MRI, MP3s, Wikipedia and texting.

"Gaming has been a major part of computing and has pushed many of its technical developments forward," says the official overview from 2012, via Gamasutra. "MMORPGs are a major commercial venture, of which [World of Warcraft] is the most successful, and take up massive amounts of time for a large number of people."

Make Software: Change the World is due to open on January 28, 2017, at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California.

Saturday, December 3, 2016

A Research Paper Shows Deep Connection Between Norse Mythology And WoW

World of Warcraft is backed with rich lore contents which undoubtedly entices most of the community. Today, a research paper highlights the deep connection and influence of Norse mythology in the World of Warcraft universe and how the two fantasies are somewhat "parallel" from each other.
             

Let's start off by defining Norse. Norsemen are considered as the full-time seafarers and traders during the Viking Age which are of the same kin as the Vikings themselves. The only main difference was the occupation of the two. While the Norsemen were seafarers and full-time traders, the Vikings were the farmers and are also warriors by "noble birth." (they are also known to be good at sailing).
Norsemen are famous for their Norse Mythology which encompasses the culture of the tribe and how they perceive the world as it once was. Just like how rich their culture was, World of Warcraft has taken the inspiration in developing a profound lore into their world which we all relish today. And a student has now taken an in-depth research about the parallelism between Norse Mythology and World of Warcraft universe.

The connection between Norse Mythology and World of Warcraft may run deep but just like any other context that uses reference, Blizzard distorted and/or incorporated twists for some characters to create an entirely new figure in the WoW universe. Here is a list of some:

Yggdrasil is also known as the World Tree in Norse Mythology.
Magni Bronzebeard is the mix between three Norse characters namely: Magni, Modi and Brokkr
Thorim is related to Thor in Norse Mythology
Thrall has a lot of resemblance to the character Njal in the Njal Saga
Aside from characters, there are also connections between Norse Weaponry and WoW Artifacts in the game. According to the researcher, here's some of the artifacts in the game that has some implications from Norse:

Tirion with the Ashbringer
Varian with the Shalamayne
Arthas with the Frostmourne
Morgrainne with the Corrupted Ashbringer

If you want to learn more about the entire story behind the characters and weapons, you can simply check out the unfinished research here. What do you think of the connections between Norse Mythology and World of Warcraft? Share your thoughts in the comments down below!

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

Why raiding is so expensive in World of Warcraft: Legion

Players who do raids, mythic dungeons and other high-end PvE activities in World of Warcraft may have noticed the high cost of flasks, potions and consumables in the Legion expansion. While the Warlords of Draenor equivalents of these items cost almost nothing, a Legion flask can cost over 1,500 gold on many servers’ auction houses.
               

I’ve written in the past about the player economy in WoW, and what’s been going on with alchemy in Legion is interesting. Here’s what’s going on and why it’s happening.

THE PRICE OF ENTRY

First, let’s talk about why this is a really big deal.

Warcraft’s PvE content is challenging, especially as you get into the higher difficulty levels of raids and mythic dungeons. This content is designed around the assumption that players will use everything available to them in the game to augment their characters and maximize the amount of damage they can deal, tank or heal off.

TIME IS MONEY, FRIEND!

There are four main herbs in Legion: Aethril, Fjarnskaggl, Dreamleaf and Foxflower. There’s also a special plant called Starlight Rose. Each of the regular herbs grows in a different region of the Broken Isles, and the roses grow exclusively in the max-level region of Suramar.

There are four kinds of flasks: one to increase stamina, one to increase agility, one to increase intellect and one to increase strength. Each flask has a different recipe, but all of them require 20 normal herbs — ten each of two kinds — and seven roses.

While you can harvest as many as seven normal herbs from a single node, you can only get one Starlight Rose from each spawn. Unless you have the highest skill level for collecting roses, which requires a lot of grinding, you have a chance for your attempt to pick the rose to fail. This outcome leaves you with worthless dust.