World of Warcraft
| World of Warcraft | |
| Developer(s) | Blizzard Entertainment |
| Publisher(s) | Vivendi Universal |
| Release date | November 23, 2004 |
| Genre | MMORPG |
| Mode(s) | Multiplayer |
| Rating(s) | Teen (T) |
| Platform(s) | Windows, Mac OS X |
| Media | CDs (4), DVD (1) |
| Input | Keyboard, Mouse |
World of Warcraft (WoW) is a class-based massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) developed by Blizzard Entertainment. It is the 4th Blizzard game, not including expansion packs, set in the Warcraft Universe, a fantasy setting introduced by Warcraft: Orcs & Humans in 1994. World of Warcraft is set four years after the events at the conclusion of Blizzard's previous release, Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne.
Table of contents |
General information
The game was simultaneously released on November 23, 2004 in North America, Australia and New Zealand, on both PC and Macintosh systems. The game sold more than 240,000 copies in its first 24 hours on the market, more than any other PC game in history. Though not officially released in South Korea until January 18th, 2005, it had been found on store shelves since November 2004. The game was released in Europe on February 11th, 2005 with English, French and German language versions. On March 2, 2005, 100,000 testers signed up for China's WoW beta test within the first hour. The game won high praise at E3 in 2003, including Gamer's Pulse's Best of Show award. World of Warcraft was declared by many in the computer gaming industry, including GameSpot and Gamespy, as 2004's game of the year.
Characters
Because World of Warcraft is a role-playing game, players create characters which serve as their avatar in the online world.
When creating a character in World of Warcraft, the player can choose from eight different races and nine different character classes. The races are split into two equally sized factions: the Alliance and the Horde:
- The Alliance consists of Humans, Night Elves, Dwarves, and Gnomes.
- The Horde consists of Orcs, Tauren, Undead (a.k.a. Forsaken), and Trolls.
- Additionally, there are many NPC races such as Goblins, Ogres, and Murlocs.
The nine available classes are Druid, Hunter, Mage, Paladin, Priest, Rogue, Shaman, Warlock and Warrior. Two of the classes are faction-specific: Paladins for the Alliance and Shamans for the Horde. Classes are also limited by race.
In addition to the character classes, a player may choose two primary professions and as many secondary professions as they wish. The primary professions are Mining, Skinning, Herbalism, Alchemy, Blacksmithing, Engineering, Leatherworking, Tailoring and Enchanting. The secondary professions are Fishing, Cooking and First Aid. The professions consist of three types: gathering, item creation, and service. Many players choose to pair two related professions (allowing the character to gather the required materials for the crafting skill), such as Mining and Blacksmithing or Alchemy and Herbalism. Some players choose to select only "gathering" professions, opting to simply supply metal, skins or herbs to crafters. This type of player will typically offer gathered items for sale on the game's Auction Houses.
With World of Warcraft Blizzard has made some changes to the typical MMORPG in response to the common complaints received from players about other games in this genre. In particular the game play has been changed to make it more even and fair for both 'hardcore' and casual players. For example, players gain more experience overall from completing quests than by killing monsters ("grinding"). While grinding is still a viable tactic for advancing levels, players who choose to quest will progress faster than those who simply kill NPC monsters.
The World of Warcraft End User License Agreement EULA specifically forbids the real-world sale of in-game material (e.g., via eBay). This policy is designed to make play more accessible to the casual player. Blizzard actively takes action against gold farmers by both temporarily and permanently suspending accounts.
Virtual world
The current world is built around two main continents: The Eastern Kingdoms and Kalimdor. The new World Tree of Teldrassil is off the northwestern coast of Kalimdor. While not all of the history between the end of The Frozen Throne and the four years between the start of World of Warcraft has been revealed, it is assumed the conflict between the Horde's forces and the marines of the Theramore Isles at the end of the Orc mini-campaign were at least the kindling for the blaze of the current conflict.
Some of the notable landmarks and locations in the game that were featured in previous Warcraft games, namely Warcraft III, are:
- The Undercity, which resides under the Ruins of Lordaeron, is the main city of the Forsaken, ruled by Sylvanas Windrunner and Varimathras. Here they are engineering a new plague to wipe out the Scourge and all other life forms in Azeroth;
- The Eastern and Western Plaguelands, including places such as Andorhal, the place of origin of the Scourge and the Plague of Undeath, and Stratholme, the site of Arthas' initial fall into insanity;
- The Blasted Lands, home of the orginal Dark Portal from which the Orcs first came into Azeroth; and
- Kalimdor, home to the Tauren, Orcs, Trolls, and Night Elves. Areas to the north include Ashenvale Forest, Felwood, Winterspring, Azshara and the Moonglade. These regions surround Mt. Hyjal, where the final battle against Archimonde was held and the fall of the Burning Legion's Second Invasion took place.
Community
In addition to playing the game itself and conversing on discussion forums provided by Blizzard, World of Warcraft players often participate in the World of Warcraft community in creative ways, including fan artwork, comic strip style storytelling or even recording songs devoted to deleted NPCs
Operating systems
As of March 2005, World of Warcraft is only available for Macintosh and Microsoft Windows. Blizzard has no immediate plans of releasing a Linux version, but there is an online petition aimed at convincing Blizzard to release a true Linux port. However, support for World of Warcraft is present in Windows API implementations Wine and Cedega, allowing the game to be played on Linux.
Version
Recently Blizzard announced that their next patch would contain the much awaited PvP battlegrounds. They have stated that this patch will contain more than one battleground.
As of May 8, 2005, World of Warcraft is operating version 1.4.2
1.4.1 and 1.4.2 were primarily bug fixes.
1.4.0 includes the PvP Honor system, which provides players with rewards for maintaining a certain rank based on their PvP performance. It was scheduled to ship with the game but was delayed. The patch also introduces the Gurubashi Arena event: every three hours, a treasure chest is dropped in the arena for players to compete over. Elemental invasions, in Silithus, Un'Goro Crater, Azshara, and Winterspring have also begun.
The 1.3.1 patch is notable for making the user interface more user-friendly by allowing multiple action bars to be up simultaneously. It also includes text bubbles above PC and NPC's heads when speaking, class improvements (for Mage, Druid, Warrior, and Priest), a HUD of quest goals below the mini-map, population restrictions on certain dungeons, lowering of many costs when getting class training, and numerous other tweaks and bug fixes that are listed in detail at the official community website. The deployment of the most recent patch was marred by server issues which prevented many players from being able to log in to their accounts, and created enormous amounts of lag in game that prevented gameplay. As is the case with most MMORPG games, these types of issues show up and are addressed on a constant basis. Developers of the MMORPG have stated that, starting after version 1.3, patches will be released more frequently; some players had noted content patches were very large and delivered after long durations of little patching activity.
Sales
As of March, 2005, World of Warcraft has sold more than 1,500,000 copies worldwide. Blizzard also stated recently that at any given time at least 500,000 subscribers are online. Sales will be limited accordingly until more servers, called worlds, or realms, are assembled. Nevertheless, due to massive sales initially, there were periods where players had to wait in queues due to some realms being at their maximum player limit. Recently, players have been impressed with the differences, but are still asking for more. While in certain high population areas, (like Ironforge or Orgrimmar) players often experience a sort of framerate lag. Blizzard has said that they are working on solving the problem.
Awards
- 2005 Game Developers Choice Awards
- Excellence in Visual Arts
- Official World of Warcraft Website – List of Awards
External links
- The official World of Warcraft website
- The official European World of Warcraft community website
- The official World of Warcraft forums
- Thottbot – World of Warcraft database
- Allakhazam – Another World of Warcraft database
- The Goblin Workshop – The third World of Warcraft database
Reviews
Wikis
- WoWwiki.com – Official wiki of Cosmos UI
| Blizzard Entertainment Games | |
|---|---|
| StarCraft Games | StarCraft | StarCraft: Brood War | StarCraft: Ghost |
| Warcraft Games | Warcraft | Warcraft II | Warcraft III | Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne | World of Warcraft |
| Diablo Games | Diablo | Diablo: Hellfire | Diablo II | Diablo II: Lord of Destruction |