Jump to content

World of Warcraft

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ktwombley (talk | contribs) at 00:24, 17 March 2006 (Leveling rate: they are increasing the level cap). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

World of Warcraft
World of Warcraft box art
Developer(s)Blizzard Entertainment
Publisher(s)Vivendi Universal
Platform(s)Windows, Mac OS X
ReleaseNovember 23, 2004 (US), (CA), (AU), (NZ)
January 18, 2005 (KR)
February 11, 2005 (EU)
June 6, 2005 (CN)
July 21, 2005 (SG)
November 8, 2005 (TW), (HK), (MO)
Genre(s)Fantasy MMORPG
Mode(s)Multiplayer

World of Warcraft (commonly abbreviated as WoW) is a massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) developed by Blizzard Entertainment. It is the 4th game in the Warcraft series, excluding expansion packs and the canceled Warcraft Adventures: Lord of the Clans. The Warcraft games are set in the aptly named 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. As of February 2006, World of Warcraft is one of the most popular MMORPGs in the world, with more than 6.0 millionactive subscriptions. This level of popularity eventually led major MMORPG developers such as Sony Online Entertainment to re-think the way they are making games, even changing the gameplay of their past successful titles.

Characters

Characters in the World of Warcraft are tied to specific user accounts which can be used in all servers, or realms. Users can create up to 10 characters per realm (with a maximum total of 50[1] ) which range from a diverse amount of races and classes. The two factions currently in the game are the Alliance and Horde, both consisting of different races.

Races and classes

Players create characters which serve as their avatar in the online world of Azeroth. 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. Although the factions each have the same number of races available to them, on many servers the ratio of alliance to horde characters is 2:1. This might be due to the fact that some players consider the Alliance to be the "good guys." It also could relate to the fact that Horde characters are often considered "ugly" and as such are not very attractive races to play. However, the release of the Blood Elves in the upcoming Burning Crusade will provide the Horde with a "pretty race" and the two factions might start to balance out.

See also: Races in the Warcraft universe.

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. There are 20 possible combinations of race and class for each faction, for a total of 40 combinations across both factions. Template:World of Warcraft classes

Character types

There are two types of characters in the game: Player Characters (PC) and Non-Player Characters (NPCs), the latter having many different offshoots. Player Characters are people around the world actively playing the game. The color of a PC's name tag can vary from blue, green, yellow, or red depending on faction, location, and play combat status. NPCs are the characters that can only interact with player characters through scripted events or AI. NPCs have many types. First are the friendly NPCs, whose names are displayed in green. They will be found automatically in any city allied with your faction, as well as any city you have earned a reputation of friendly or better with. There are also several hostile NPCs, mainly the NPCs of the opposing faction and mobs (enemies controlled by AI). Any character with his name displayed in red is hostile towards you and should either be avoided or dealt with caution. There are also neutral NPCs that will only attack you when provoked, their name displayed in yellow. Early in the game, most mobs will be neutral. NPCs in major and minor cities can sell you merchandise, train you in your selected profession and class, sell you mounts, connect you to the Auction House (an eBay-like place to buy and sell items), and provide all services that are needed in the game. Some will merely offer advice or further the story, while others patrol around set paths to keep cities defended against overzealous players.

Professions

Template:World of Warcraft professions

In addition to the character classes, a player may choose two primary professions and all three secondary professions that the game offers, if they so choose. Essentially, there are two types of professions: gathering and item creation. Many players choose to pair two related professions, thus allowing the character to gather the required materials for the crafting skill. The most commonly paired skills are as follows: Mining and Blacksmithing, Mining and Engineering, Skinning and Leatherworking, Herbalism and Alchemy, and to a lesser extent, tailoring and enchanting. Some players choose to select only "gathering" professions, opting to simply supply resources to players with item creation skills. These types of players will typically offer gathered items for sale in the game's auction houses. In the upcoming expansion, the Jewel Crafting profession will be introduced.

Attributes

Attributes are used by the game to calculate strengths and weaknesses for each character. The attributes as used in World of Warcraft are as follows:

  • Agility (AGI): Each point of Agility increases armor by 2 points, and ranged attack power by 2 points. Hunters, Rogues and Druids also gain 1 point of melee attack power per point of Agility, although Druids only get attack power when shape-shifted to a Cat. Agility also increases a character's chance to dodge and perform a critical strike with a weapon. The degree of effect is different for some classes. A level 60 Rogue gains a 1% chance to get a critical strike for every 29 Agility, and a level 60 Hunter receives 1% for every 53 Agility. All other classes get 1% crit from 20 agility at level 60.
  • Strength (STR): Each point of strength increases attack power by 2 points for Warriors, Paladins, Shamans and Druids, while Priests, Mages, Warlocks, Rogues and Hunters get 1 attack power per strength. It is also linked to the amount of damage blocked by a shield. This attribute is generally important for all melee classes (Warriors, Shamans, Paladins, Rogues and feral Druids) although Hunters also benefit from strength.
  • Intellect (INT): Each point of Intellect increases the character's mana by 15. It is also linked to the critical strike chance with spells (Crit chance varies for every class/level. A level 60 mage will gain a 1% crit chance with spells for each 59.5 int they have.). This attribute is very important for casting classes (Mages, Warlocks, Priests, Druids, Shamans, Paladins ), and is also used by Hunters, although it is not of the highest priority. Intellect is also used to determine the rate at which weapon skill increases.
  • Stamina (STA): Each point of Stamina increases a character's health by 10. Stamina is especially important for Warriors and Warlocks, but is also important for any class that focuses on player versus player combat as the more stamina a player has, the longer the player survives.
  • Spirit (SPI): Spirit increases the rate at which you recover health and mana. Each point of spirit increases the amount of mana regenerated by 1/8 and health by 1/9 per tick (every 2 seconds). Regardless of how high your spirit is, your health does not regenerate in combat. Mana does, but only if a caster has not cast a spell in the last 5 seconds. This is referred to as The Five Second Rule(FSR). Trolls have an inherent passive racial ability that keeps 10% of their health regeneration active during combat. Shaman also possess a talent in the restoration tree that allows for 10% passive health regeneration in combat. Additionally, the formula to calculate the amount of mana regenerated per second varies depending on the class, Priests being the class that benefits most from spirit.

These attributes hold a key role in determining a character's health (hit points), mana (is used up by casting spells), attack power (each point of attack power increases a character's damage per second by 1/14), armor (reduces the amount of damage you take), dodge chance, critical strike chances (a default of double damage with ranged and melee weapons, a default of 1.5 times with spells), health regeneration, and mana regeneration. For each class, different attributes are more important. For classes that rely on melee combat, strength is more important than spirit, while spell casters will benefit more from a spirit and intelligence boost than from a boost in strength.

The world

Geography

File:World of Warcraft World Map.jpg
World of Warcraft World Map

The current virtual 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 of the four years between the end of The Frozen Throne and the start of World of Warcraft has been revealed, it is known that the conflict between the Horde's forces and the marines of the Theramore Isles at the end of the Orc mini-campaign were the kindling for the current conflict. This forced the Horde to mainly reside in Kalimdor, and the Alliance to settle predominantly in the Eastern Kingdoms.

Some of the notable landmarks and locations in the game that were featured in previous Warcraft games, namely Warcraft III, are featured in the game. They are:

As of early 2006 a number of areas in the virtual world have yet to be implemented. Some examples of this are:

  • In Kalimdor: Mount Hyjal (south-west of Winterspring), The Caverns of Time and Uldum (both in Tanaris).
  • In Lordaeron: Gilneas (south of the Greymane Wall), Quel'Thalas (north-east of Stratholme), and Zul'Aman (east of Quel'Thalas).
  • In Khaz Modan: Grim Batol (in the far east of the Wetlands).
  • In Azeroth (confusingly both the name of the eastern continent and the name of the world): Medivh's Tower (in Deadwind Pass).
  • In Dun Morogh: The so called "Ironforge Airport" is a small settlement nestled high in the mountains above Ironforge, designed purely as scenery, but with much space for expansion.

It is possible to enter these zones, either accidentally or intentionally. It is however not advised as it is a bannable offense.

File:World of Warcraft Portal.jpg
An example of a portal from World of Warcraft.
  • One portal, the Dark Portal, is present but currently serves no purpose. There are four other portals, located in Duskwood, Ashenvale Forest, Feralas, and The Hinterlands that are the sites of four extremely powerful green dragons.

Information released recently says that, come the expansion, The Dark Portal will lead to Outland. It is thought that this portal will be opened when the expansion set is released. Some speculate that this portal will be opened when a player acquires the Book of Medivh. This book might be found on Kel'Thuzad who ought to be found in the Naxxaramas Necropolis, above Stratholme. The Naxxaramas Necropolis is not yet implemented, although you can see an inactive portal deep inside Stratholme. (Note: This is speculation based on lore; there may be more to opening the portal than just acquiring the Book of Medivh.)

The other four portals, in Ashenvale, Duskwood, Feralas, and the Hinterlands are connected to the Emerald Dream. Ysera or the Dreamer is one of the five Dragon Aspects that watch over the world of Azeroth. The green dragon and younger sister to Alexstrasza, she was empowered by the titan Eonar to be bound to the Emerald Dream in an eternal trance to forever watch over the wilds and the Druids. It is also thought that the Essence of Eranikus trinket quest will be continued and will include Emerald Dream content. The current quest chain ends when you talk to Umbranse the Spiritspeaker. He says that Eranikus is not dead and he can contact him, but he needs a powerful augur device that was stolen from him. It is unknown where this device is, how to acquire it, or whether its currently in the game right now at all. The second-to-last content patch (1.8) introduces Emeriss, Taerar, Ysondre, and Lethon, four outdoor raid encounter dragons that protect the four portals to the Emerald Dream, and hints at further development of this storyline.

The 3rd major continent, Northrend, which was featured in Warcraft III and The Frozen Throne expansion, does not appear in the World of Warcraft at all. Given that every game like World of Warcraft has had new content sold as a new game expansion, this might be added in a future expansion for this game.

Instances

World of Warcraft also features instances. Instances, or "Instanced dungeons", are dungeons that have been designed and tailored specifically for certain sizes of groups and are duplicated for each group that enters it. This way a party can experience a dungeon without interference from other players, and cannot zerg it by bringing in outside help to overwhelm the opposition. Instances will allow only a certain maximum group size to enter, ranging from 5-man groups in some small instances, to 40-man raids. As of late 2005 there are four instances which allow for a maximum of 40 people: Onyxia's Lair, Molten Core, Blackwing Lair and the Temple of Ahn'Qiraj. These are the toughest areas in the game and success in these four instances is virtually impossible without great organization and good equipment. The recently added Zul'Gurub and Ruins of Ahn'Qiraj instances allow for a maximum of 20 people and offers a more casual gameplay experience.

Typically, instanced dungeons are more elaborate and require more steps to be taken in a particular order for successful completion than are necessary in the main world. For example, requiring that a large group of enemies be defeated so that one can pull a lever to rotate a bridge in order to access a new section of the map makes sense when one group is traversing the dungeon linearly; it makes far less sense in public areas where hundreds of other players might be in the same area. Therefore, instanced dungeons tend to be much more interesting than normal areas, in which quest requirements are very simple (e.g. kill a certain number of enemies, or collect a certain number of objects).

Instances in World of Warcraft also feature many more rare item drops than just the world itself. Some rare items such as armor sets, epic weapons, rare mounts, etc. can only be found within instances. Instances are very elaborate dungeons that require good skills and organization to conquer. One of the more elaborate instances being RFD, otherwise known as Razorfen Downs, which consists of many hallways and rooms, and houses a long, elaborate spiral in the center, requiring users to fight everything in the way to advance.

Template:World of Warcraft instances

Virtual community

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 virtual community in creative ways, including fan artwork, comic strip style storytelling or even recording songs devoted to deleted NPCs such as Captain Placeholder. Blizzard furthers this community by offering in game, and out of game prizes as well as highlighting community events and occurances. Blizzard also provided incentives for inducing new members to World of Warcraft. In late October 2005 each subscribed player received a 10-day free pass[2] which they were suggested to use as seasonal gifts that could either be used or given to a friend. These passes would generate a free month's usage if the guest player purchased a full account.

Another popular phenomenon in the community is a video starring a player named Leeroy Jenkins, intended to provide publicity for Leeroy's guild. Leeroy's popularity is even present in other games such as Guild Wars, where an NPC named Kilroy Stonekin rushes into battle, disrupting a perfectly good plan, while yelling his name in a direct reference. Or, in Adventure Quest, where a direct tribute to Leeroy Jenkins is replayed by players in the Vamprook Spyre. Also, there is a similarly reckless Arachnos Soldier NPC in the game City of Villains by the name of "Jenkins." In an amazing sign of the prevalence of the Jenkins joke, he was even part of a clue on the November 16th, 2005 episode of the TV game show College Jeopardy!.

There are various other memes, including "Face Melting", a reference to a very long thread on the priest forums on the World of Warcraft website which consisted of players saying "You will melt faces as a Shadow Priest in PvP" in different ways. These memes gain notoriety through postings on the World of Warcraft Forums.

As of August 2005, the Dark Iron server has been home to the guilds of web-comic creators Scott Kurtz (pvponline), Mike Krahulik and Jerry Holkins (penny arcade). Kurtz created Panda Attack and Djörk on the Horde side, while Holkins and Krahulik initiated a series of guilds that is now known as the Penny Arcade Alliance. This event became referred to as the Comic Guild Wars, and has created healthy competition between the authors, to the extent of dedicating some of their strips to the subject.

Problems

As World of Warcraft is a constant work in progress, there are a number of issues affecting it.

  • Lag: The popularity of the game means that at times, so many people are on-line that the servers become overloaded and very slow. Serious lag — or slow operation — often occurs on weekend nights, and in the central cities of the Warcraft world, such as Ironforge and Orgrimmar (sometimes nicknamed "Lagforge", "Ironlag" and "Lagrimmar"), where large concentrations of players congregate. This is still a serious problem, even though changes were made to the Auction House. The Auction House, the trade channel, and the group channel are now linked with every capital city since the patch 1.9. The idea was that people would be spread among these cities instead of lagging one correspondent area. During the server world events corresponding with the opening of the Gates of Ahn'Qiraj, many servers experienced extremely high lag and multiple crashes, possibly resulting from high concentrations of player characters in the gate area.
  • Population: Some World of Warcraft players created characters on servers with medium to low populations. Certain low population servers are experiencing a vast number of players leaving the servers, making it harder for people to find groups, and affecting the in-game economy. Blizzard has taken certain measures to alleviate this problem by allowing character transfers on certain servers, but it is still something of a problem. The opposite of this is also true; some servers are too overpopulated and are hard to play on because of server load and long queues to log in.
  • Lopsided Horde to Alliance ratio: Many of the servers are becoming outnumbered, with many PvE and RP servers suffering a 2:1 ratio of Alliance to Horde. This affects PvP and the quality of gameplay for some players. Generally on servers following a PvP ruleset, the ratio is less exaggerated and in some cases even swings in the Horde's favor[2]. This issue will possibly be addressed in the expansion, where it has been announced that the Blood Elves will be a new playable race for the Horde. This will provide the Horde with a so-called "pretty race," which is one of the previous reasons a player might choose Alliance over the Horde races. This issue seems to be being addressed by Blizzard by enabling server transfers among specific realms. The realms that are designated for server transfers are notified beforehand, and have leveled out the "lopsided" nature of many realms.
  • Unbalanced classes: Many people tend to believe that certain classes or races are over- or underpowered. Blizzard periodically releases patches (downloaded with the Blizzard Downloader) which, along with adding features or fixing bugs, also attempt to balance gameplay by updating the class skill trees and spells. This balancing action is sometimes called 'buffing' or 'nerfing,' depending on whether the change strengthened or weakened the class.
  • Long time online required at high level: High-level dungeons can take many hours of party finding, strategy discussion, and battles. The Molten Core (a commonly run, high-level instance usually referred to as 'MC') can usually take as long as six hours to complete. However, Blizzard has made it so that the instance does not have to be done in one, large chunk. Once a group of players kill the first boss, their future progress is saved and stored for one week from the first boss kill, or to when the weekly server maintenance takes place, whichever happens first. This means that none of the bosses will spawn again until after that time period is up and the entire instance resets itself.
  • World of Warcraft is not playable offline: As with other online games, server and network stability is critical. Due to failures in these, there have been times when the game has been unplayable by a large number of players. For example, in September 2005, Blizzard gave all European players two free days of play as compensation for repeated network failures. The issues were suspected to be Blizzard's upstream Internet service provider [3].
  • Many servers, especially the PVP servers and the PVP instances, suffer a condition known as "Twinking". Twinking is when a player with a high level character gives items and equipment to lower level "Alternate" characters that they also play. This gives them an unfair advantage when participating in such battlegrounds as Warsong Gulch because they may have stat boosting gear, enabling them to deal and take more damage.
  • There is also a dramatic shift in the game style when reaching the final levels. This has been off-putting to several players. Content from levels 1 to roughly 54 is geared towards solo and small group players. At level 55 the content shifts dramatically to large group raids and instances requiring groups of 15 or 40 players. Many players are forced to find a new larger guild to find enough players to form these groups. Casual players often feel they do not have enough time to play anymore as they have to now spend a lot more time searching for a group, or participating in raid that can take more than 4 hours to complete. In order to address these problems, Blizzard announced that in patch 1.10 experience accrued after the maximum level cap will be converted to gold. It is hoped that this will increase the number of players participating in end game quests apart from simply raiding with their guilds.
  • The Sale of Virtual Property: This controversy is faced by many online games. This includes the sale of virtual objects (such as gold, items, or characters) for real life assets. Blizzard claims this is against the terms of their End User License Agreement (EULA) and to date they have banned hundreds of user accounts for engaging in this type of activity[3]. Some players react negatively to these sales as they feel that the people (or bots) collecting these resources often decrease the quality of the game by making resources and items harder to find while at the same time providing powerful characters to anyone willing to pay for them. At the same time, some players appreciate the ability to improve their characters without having to invest a significant amount of time.

Deviance from the MMORPG archetype

Blizzard has used World of Warcraft to make 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 similar experience overall from completing quests as by only killing monsters ('grinding'). Many players find grinding uninteresting and opt instead to continue to do quests.

The other system used by Blizzard to help the casual player is the "rested state". While in rested state, a character will earn twice as much experience as would normally be gained from killing monsters, but will gain the standard amount of experience from completing quests and exploring. This feature allows someone who has been away from the game for a period of time to double his leveling capability until he leaves the rested state, providing a "catch up" incentive upon returning to the game. However, in order to prevent players exploiting this by leaving one character logged off in an inn while playing another, the maximum amount of rest a character can accumulate is capped at 1.5 levels' worth; the quantity of experience this represents varies depending on the character's level. Players can increase the rate at which their characters gain rest by a factor of four by returning to an inn or capital city to log off. Rest increases whether or not a character is logged in, but slowly enough (10 days to reach a fully-rested state in an inn) that it is most easily noticed when a character is first logged in after not having been played for several hours or days.

General information

Launch and sales

File:Wowcollectors.jpg
Box shot of the World of Warcraft Collector's Edition

The game was simultaneously released on both Windows and Macintosh computer systems in North America, Australia and New Zealand on November 23, 2004. Blizzard released two versions of the game upon its launch. One was the regular CD edition, and the other was the limited Collector's Edition. The collector's box contained the following items:

  • The entire game on both one DVD and four CDs.
  • A One-month subscription to the game.
  • A guest pass to the game, providing a player's friend with 10-day access.
  • A Behind the Scenes DVD.
  • A Collector's Edition Soundtrack.
  • A Collector's Edition manual.
  • The Art of World of Warcraft (Hardcover book).
  • A cloth map of Azeroth.
  • An exclusive in-game pet for every character, chosen from a Zergling, Panda, and Mini Diablo.

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 18, 2005, it had been found on store shelves since November 2004. The game was released in Europe on February 11, 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 was released in China on June 6, 2005. The game won high praise at 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. And, as with any game, it has its own terminology.

As is common with the launch of a MMORPG, World of Warcraft had its share of problems at first. Partly because of the huge number of people who bought the game, along with server instability, Blizzard chose to stop selling copies of the game some time after the launch. Sales were limited accordingly until more servers, called worlds, or realms, could be assembled. Due to the massive initial sales, there were also periods where players had to wait in queues before playing, as some realms were at their maximum player limit. When more servers were added, these queues became less common and sales of the game resumed. Still, in certain high population areas (like Ironforge or Orgrimmar), players continue to experience game performance delays.

File:Zergling Panda Diablo.jpg
The three exclusive in-game pets as seen in the Collector's Edition. A Panda, Mini Diablo and Zergling.

As of March 2006, World of Warcraft has more than 6,000,000 players worldwide, making it the most popular MMORPG in the world. Over 1 million of these players live in the US. 1.5 million of these are from the Chinese launch on July 7, 2005. These numbers exclude all players under free promotional subscriptions, expired or canceled subscriptions, and expired pre-paid cards. Blizzard also stated that at any given time at least 500,000 subscribers are online. Due to World of Warcraft's high sales it has been described as a "runaway success" with "overwhelming popularity", which other games, like The Matrix Online, blame for their lackluster sales.[4]

On August 3, 2005, China implemented legislation which forbids minors from playing games in which players kill each other. The impact of this on Blizzard's revenue is still to be determined.

World of Warcraft won critical acclaim in 2004 and achieved many awards as a result of this, some which can be found at the official World of Warcraft list of awards.

On February 2, 2006, the game won the "Grand Prix" award at the 2006 Imagina Games Awards. [4]

System requirements

World of Warcraft runs natively on both Macintosh and Microsoft Windows platforms. Boxed copies of the game use a hybrid CD to install the game, eliminating the need for separate Mac and Windows retail products.

The following requirements are as stated on the official World of Warcraft website, but generally players believe that these specifications are too low for the game to be played enjoyably.

World of Warcraft allows all users to play together, regardless of their operating system.

As of July 2005, Blizzard has no immediate plans to release 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. FreeBSD users have also been successful in using Wine to run the game.

Furthermore, they have not yet considered making it possible to play WOW as single player/Offline, that is: one plays alone against the computer controlling NPCs. This is discouraging for those who are not on an unlimited internet usage plan.

As of Patch 1.9.3 the game added native support for Intel-powered Macs such as the iMac Core Duo and MacBook Pro making World of Warcraft a Universal Application. As a result of this the minimum supported Mac OS X version has been changed to 10.3.9; World of Warcraft version 1.9.3 and later will not launch on older versions of Mac OS X.

Realms

World of Warcraft also uses servers, known as 'realms' to allow players to choose their preferred gameplay type, and to allow the game to support as many subscribers as it does. Users may have up to ten characters per each realm, up to a maximum of fifty characters per account.

There are four different kinds of realms. Normal, Player versus Player (PvP), Roleplaying (RP) and Roleplaying Player versus Player (RP-PvP). On a PvP or RP-PvP realm players can be attacked any time when they are not in a "friendly" zone or an instance. On a Normal or RP realm, players can only attack opposing faction members that willingly choose to "flag" themselves. Entering an enemy capital or a battleground automatically flags a character for PVP. The RP and RP-PvP realms also have naming and chat rules to encourage roleplaying.

Modifications

Modifying the user interface (UI) of a game is nothing new, but Blizzard has included exceptional support for modifications. At a simple level it allows full control over the content of toolbars and hot keys, as well as macros to automate sets of operations and the ability to script much more elaborate tools.

The range of modifications that are available can be anything from ways to control Winamp in-game, to adding extra rows of button bars for spells, skills and more. There are also various cosmetic mods, including one that reproduces the infamous 'Leeroy Jenkins' sound [5].

All addons are created using the Lua programming language and XML, and images used for any modification are created using the .TGA (Targa) and .BLP image formats. Blizzard has released a User Interface Customization tool which they call "Cui" [6]..

Some programs that operate stand-alone, independent of World of Warcraft may be considered exploits, especially if they automate operation beyond that made available using the built-in macro functionality, or pass information in or out of the game. Use of these is against the Terms of Service agreed to when playing the game, and as such, may lead to possible suspension or closure of accounts. Blizzard has stated on the official forums that any modification that uses the Lua programming language will not be considered an exploit, though Blizzard reserves the right to change information available via the Lua language if the modification changes the nature of encounters in the game.

WoWWiki has several resources for information about WoW User Interface customization.

Exploits

As with all massively multiplayer online games, World of Warcraft has had its share of players who exploit the world of Azeroth. Such abuse ranges from gold farming to selling accounts online (on sites such as eBay). One common exploit was the use of leet (an example is '|-|() \/\/ |2 U?', read as 'how r u?') to communicate between the Horde and the Alliance, since symbols and numbers were left unmodified in otherwise scrambled communications. This has since been stopped by modifying the linguistics engine to remove punctuation and numbers from the text.

Known types

  • Speed Hacking/Teleporting/subterrain travel – Since character position in World of Warcraft is determined by the client side, it is possible for players to send out artificial positional data and be instantly transported to any part of the world (even underground) or used to speed up traveling speed by increasing positional deltas.
  • Botting – A player who runs a third party program to control their character. The bot will kill monsters, loot gold, mine ore, collect herbs or gain levels automatically without the player having to be in front of the computer.
  • Game Mechanics Exploits – There are also other exploits involving the physics of the game, sometimes in conjunction with items. This includes using wall-walking (removed in patch 1.9) to get into unfinished areas or abilities like the Sentry Totem to make one's character unattackable by other players. These exploits are usually not discovered right away and are allowed to be used (though typically thought of as unfair) until stated otherwise by Blizzard.
  • Data Mining – This is typically most common around the time that a patch is released on the public test realm. Players will try to access files not yet in game and then host them on websites to expose content not yet released (usually new zones, items, and graphics).

Legality

The World of Warcraft End User License Agreement specifically forbids these kinds of activities. Blizzard takes action against anyone who exploits the game by temporarily and permanently suspending accounts. So far, Blizzard has banned well over 25,000 players from the game. Blizzard makes heavy use of a system known as The Warden on the Windows version of the game in order to detect third-party programs, such as botting software. There has been some controversy as to the legality of The Warden, since it allegedly uses techniques similar to spyware in order to analyse other running software on the players' PCs, as well as the file system.[7] However, software such as anti-virus software loosely falls into this definition as well. Debates regarding the game's EULA as well as the rights of the players continue.

Defenses against banning

Although Blizzard continues to ban players when they are detected as cheating, many players have found ways to escape detection. In particular, Blizzard relies heavily on The Warden to detect some botting and cheating programs. However, such anti-cheat software can only follow a set of rules, so there follows a cat and mouse game as the game developers and cheat programmers attempt to circumvent each other. In November 2005, it was proven that the XCP rootkit secretly included with Sony music CDs in the US for the purposes of copy prevention could be used to disguise cheat programs from The Warden. In November 2005, Blizzard introduced patch version 1.8.3 which added the Blizzard Launcher application. The Launcher was designed to report cheats that would be considered a bannable offense to the user so they may avoid starting the game (and Warden) before removing them. The Blizzard Launcher is automatically opened by default desktop and start menu shortcuts. However, it is possible to launch World of Warcraft without the Blizzard Launcher by running the game's main executable file directly.


Expansion pack

On October 28, 2005 Blizzard revealed that the first expansion pack will be called World of Warcraft: The Burning Crusade. It will include an increased level cap of 70, a new crafting profession, and two new races, one of which being the Blood Elves for the Horde, which will reside in the capital city of Quel'Thalas. The expansion will also feature Outlands as a new playable zone, as well as a new flying mount, usable only in Outlands, for high-level players. Some of the expansion's features will be available to all players, though the most significant additions – visiting Outlands, creating characters of the two new races, and so on – will require the Burning Crusade to be installed.

Criticism

Concerns over homosexuality in-game

Blizzard garnered criticism for their decision in January 2006 to ban mention of homosexuality in-game. The incident occurred after several players were cited for "harassment" after advocating a group for gay-straight alliance[8] [9]. Blizzard have responded by outlining the policy they based this decision on, "To promote a positive game environment for everyone and help prevent such harassment from taking place as best we can, we prohibit mention of topics related to sensitive real-world subjects in open chat within the game, and we do our best to take action whenever we see such topics being broadcast."

Players taking a view supporting the decision feel that mention of any real life issues such as sexuality, religion, or politics should not have a place in an online fantasy game. They feel Blizzard's policy is correct for banning discussion of these issues to prevent the game's public chat channels from becoming a forum for activist groups of any type. These players feel those forums are the proper place to host such discussions.

Blizzard later reversed the decision to issue warnings to a player promoting a GLBT-friendly guild. Blizzard has responded that they intend to set up in-game channels focused primarily for guild advertisements, and will provide "sensitivity training" for its staff.

Leveling rate

Some players, usually more hardcore gamers, have criticized the game for being too easy, and having a quick leveling curve, which brings the player from level 1 to 60 in only a couple weeks (sometimes less) if played with dedication. As a result, many people have several max level characters, yet haven't seen all of the areas of the world during the leveling process. Blizzard will be increasing the level cap to 70 in the upcoming expansion pack "World of Warcraft: The Burning Crusade".

Similarly, many people have complained that once at max level, there is not enough content to make the game worth playing. Some casual gamers say that they can get to level 60 with solo or group play, but in order to do anything meaningful to improve their character at max level they need to join large scale raids that take several hours to do. Some hardcore gamers, on the other hand, complain that there are only a handful of raid areas to explore, and that Blizzard does not introduce new content fast enough.

Meaningful Player vs. Player Combat

Many avid PvPers (players who focus on Player versus Player combat) have problems with the way PvP in WoW is being handled. Specifically, some players find it annoying that ever since Battlegrounds (instanced PvP) have come out, there is no encouragement to partake in PvP outside of these three instances (PvP outside of an instance is referred to as WPvP-World PvP). This, many players argue, creates a sterile environment that is repeated many times over. Other issues with World PvP is the introduction of Civilian Dishonorable Kills (DKs). The implementation of this game mechanic makes it very hard to have large player versus player encounters in towns due to the fact that players receive a penalty for killing civilians, who are often hostile and in hard-to-avoid spots. Finally, some players are upset because no matter what they do, there is no change in the game. Many players are hoping for capturable towns and other areas in the expansion and/or later patches. These issues may yet be addressed; the staff on WoW's forums have said that they are looking into changing the Honor system and revitalizing WPvP.

Player Housing

Many players have expressed an interest in housing (in-game "houses" for players or groups/guilds), a feature that many rival MMO games have. Players in favor of such a change say that getting away from the pace of adventuring would be a nice change, and like professions, would add another facet to the already immersive game. Features could include a small bank; profession-specific items; and faction, race, and class-specific decorations. However, many people think that such a change would promote "slacking off" in gameplay and backtrack from the previous work Blizzard Entertainment has made to make gameplay a first priority. Although the viewpoints are many, it is agreed that such a change would require a lot of scripting and writing of new code, so the best chances of implementation would be through an expansion pack. Blizzard has not released any such plans for the upcoming expansion, World of Warcraft: The Burning Crusade.

See also

References

  1. ^ Blizzard Entertainment (2005). World of Warcraft Community Site - Support Retrieved Reb. 23, 2005.
  2. ^ Blizzard Entertainment (2005). World of Warcraft Community Site - Check your inbox for the Recruit-A-Friend e-mail! Retrieved Mar. 6, 2006.
  3. ^ Blizzard Entertainment (2005). World of Warcraft Community Site - World of Warcraft Accounts Closed. Retrieved Feb. 23, 2006.
  4. ^ "Conqueror in a War of Virtual Worlds", The New York Times: September 6, 2005; by Seth Schiesel in "The Arts" section [1]

Official websites

Useful resources

Reviews