Wrath of the Lich King Cinematic
Posted in Warcraft, WoW on August 22nd, 2008Blizzard has unveiled the new Wrath of the Lich King cinematic in Leipzig. You can watch it online or you can download the high-def version here.
Blizzard has unveiled the new Wrath of the Lich King cinematic in Leipzig. You can watch it online or you can download the high-def version here.
When asked if they plan to introduce microtransactions for WoW, Blizzard’s representatives vehemently denied any plans to do that.
Here’s the quote from Blizzard’s co-founder:
When it was put to him that Blizzard lost money by not charging for items, company co-founder Frank Pearce, senior vice-president of product develepment, argued that subscribers have a better experience and are more loyal.
“Can you show us a profit and loss statement that shows that we lose money on that?” he challenged.
“I would say that that’s arguable, because part of protecting the integrity of the game is ensuring that the subscribership has a reason to continue playing and feels good about the experience that they have.
So you won’t be able to buy items or gold officially (or legally) any time soon.
This guy clearly had it when it comes to bots. Even the most sophisticated bots (like WoW Glider) use a pre-scripted routine that’s easy to spot.
NRP has a report on gold farming in China.
Playing online games for 12 hours is a fulltime job for thousands of Chinese workers. They’re accumulating virtual money — or “gold” — which they can sell for real cash. But it’s a dull and labor-intensive job with limited payoffs.
According to the interview, there’s a gap between what you get paid if your farm gold in the US or in China. If you do it in China, you expect at most $4 for 12 hours of work. In the US, the same gold gets you $13. I’m not sure the economics work like that but that’s what they said.
So if you want to buy cheap WoW gold, go to Shanghai!
Blizzard are done with the patch it seems. You can view the Black Temple trailer below:
There’s also an HD version of it here.
I know some of you are interested in purchasing WoW gold. I haven’t seen a reliable comparison of prices between vendors so far but this one seems pretty close.
| US Gold | Team-VIP | GamerKing | IGE |
| 100 |
$19.70 |
$26.21 | $27.36 |
| 500 | $94.73 | $127.27 | $133.05 |
| 1,000 | $188.11 | $253.19 | $264.76 |
| 2,000 | $374.04 | $504.20 | $527.34 |
| 3,000 | $558.54 | $753.78 | $788.49 |
| 4,000 | $742.08 | $1,002.40 | $1048.68 |
| Euro Gold | Team-VIP | GamerKing | IGE |
| 500 | $14.40 | $14.92 | $17.01 |
| 1,000 | $26.91 | $27.95 | $32.14 |
| 1,500 | $38.73 | $40.29 | $46.58 |
| 2,000 | $50.39 | $52.47 | $60.85 |
| 3,000 | $74.21 | $77.33 | $89.90 |
| 4,000 | $97.38 | $101.54 | $118.30 |
Maybe someone could do a similar price comparison for powerleveling.
The Arena titles has finally surfaced - courtesy of Drysc.
There will be four rankings to be attained:
The rankings are per Battlegroup.
I’ve probably seen hundreds of spam messages advertsing WoW gold as well as powerleveling services.
Blizzard has struck back recently - banning over 100,000 accounts and deleting 11 million gold (yes, that’s 11,000,000 of WoW gold). I imagine this means no more cheap wow gold for a month!
TechDirt are comparing this to the economy of Namibia:
There are also other problems with trying to count in-game economies — partly because they’re very much at the whim of the makers of various games. So, for example, when World of Warcraft makers Blizzard simply remove 11 million gold pieces from circulation, after shutting down accounts that made gold through fraud and cheats, how is that counted in the grand economic scheme?
What’s your take on this?
World of Warcraft has been a million-dollar business for Blizzard but it’s a million-dollar business for companies who sell WoW gold, accounts, and more.
Game outsourcing has been here ever since Ultima Online came out more than a decade ago. Diablo 2 item trading was quite a big business but recently eBay banned the auctions of virtual goods.
BBC has an article on the implications of game outsourcing, here’s a few quotes:
Qin Shen, who works for a company called Ucdao.com, says: “Many white collar workers want to improve their character on their own, but they do not have much time. They need to go to work in the day and they don’t have the energy to improve at night, so they need someone else to play for them.”
But to say this is hugely controversial among the game’s community is putting it mildly. I posted a message on one website asking for people who buy gold to get in touch - and got a number of quite hostile responses.
Eventually, I did find someone who had bought gold.
“I have a life outside of the game that’s certainly much more important, so the few precious hours I do get to play on my game I don’t want to spend doing the same thing over and over again to get in-game money, when I could just buy that and do the stuff in-game that I actually enjoy,” he said.
I wonder who’s holding the record for leveling from 1 to 60. I was looking at a few powerleveling guides and I saw that Joana was boasting she was able to do 1 to 60 in 4 days, 20 hours.
That’s about three times faster than it took me to level my main character - a hunter.