Entries in starcraft II (5)
BlizzCon 2009: How Did MMO-Champion Do, You Ask?
The short answer is that Boubouille scored. The data mining machine, who used some other resources for his recent discoveries, received almost a perfect score during yesterday's opening ceremony. Nearly every World of Warcraft detail that had been disclosed by MMO-Champion.com came true. Nearly ever one. There's absolutely no way I can take away from the sleuthing that went on to find out Cataclysm's particulars. Sure, I didn't believe them all at first, but Blizzard confirmed that the company is simply crazy. Crazy enough to reinvent what MMO gamers, not just World of Warcraft players, will expect in future expansions. Here's what MMO-Champion had spot on:
- Worgen & Goblins - WoW.com independently "confirmed" this before the event ever happened, but it was Boubouille and his mask discovery that sparked the rumors. The new races' racials definitely sound OP as announced. However it was later confirmed that all the other races will have their racials revamped.
- Level cap raised to 85 - Seems an arbitrary choice, but Blizzard wants players to focus a bit more on the content leading up to level 85. Not just the idea of getting there. Of course that won't stop many people from being level capped week 1.
- Azeroth revamp - The lands as we know them will indeed change drastically. Barrens is split in two (double the Barrens Chat?!), Grim Batol is now Twilight Highlands and various other lands, coastlines and jungles will radically change.
- Flying everywhere - Yes folks, we will be able to fly everywhere in Cataclysm. This even includes Wintergrasp.
- Class combinations - Data mining discovered the new possibilities and they've all come true, even Night Elf Mages. Solving the 2:1 Horde to Alliance druid question is the Worgen's ability to offer a self-standing holy trinity.
- Unfinished original content done - Uldum and Mount Hyjal will both be arriving as part of Cataclysm. Blizzard stated that Hyjal was never completed because it was impossible to do what they wanted previously.
- New Secondary Profession - Archaeology (a word that will be often misspelled) will be added to WoW. It'll be the first secondary profession that plays like a gathering profession. No, fishing doesn't count. After collecting from nodes of ruins and such, players will be able to discover rewards. The mechanic to discovery hasn't been disclosed, but the possibility of a mini-game (Bejewled?!) was mentioned. We will be able to track ruin nodes, and other gathering nodes at the same time.
- Mastery system - A new mode of progression. The Mastery system is going to work alongside Talents to offer additional character customization, and it won't be class restricted. This means a Priest can pick up the same Mastery skills (or whatever they are to be called) as a Rogue. We are going to find out more details during the WoW Game Systems panel at 10:30 PST. I'll be covering it via Twitter, and I expect it to be live blogged here as well.
- Heroic Deadmines & Shadowfang Keep - We heard dungeon revamps were coming, and now it's official. These particular dungeons will use the same art and models. To spice things up these assets will be mixed with new encounters and fights. We'll hear more at today's Raids & Dungeons panel, which I'll be covering as well.
- Ragnaros - He's indeed back, "bigger and more pissed." How much bigger can the developers possibly make the Lord of the Fire Elementals?
- So much more - Changes to fishing, Blackrock Spire is back, new PvP zone, rated BGs and the Alliance loses Southshore!
Look At Me, Look At Me! - A News Recap
- Ozzy Ozzborne at BlizzCon - The Ozzy @ BlizzCon 2009 rumor has been around the block. It first appeared in early July, and I didn't really take it that seriously then. Sure, he was in a (damn fine) commercial for WoW, but that doesn't mean he's going to perform. Well, with VideoGamesLive out of the picture this year it does! Blizzard has confirmed that the junior "Prince of F&*^ing Darkness" (since 1979) will be rocking out Anaheim in just over a week. The concert will also be viewable as part of the DirecTV package. What are the odds that Ozzy actually plays?
- Icecrown to have 31 bosses - "Promising" 31 bosses in a raid for a PvE content junky like myself is more than a pony, Ghostcrawler. Everyone knows the ratio of boss fights to ponies is 10:1, and here you promise 31:0. How dare you sir! And how dare you quip later on that you were joking...maybe. Damn your brain teasers! Who do you think you are J.J. Abrams? /shakesfist
- Battle.net v2.0 news - StarCraft II was "delayed" to 2010 earlier this month, and you can at least partially blame Blizzard's matchmaking, login and purchasing platform known as Battle.net for that. According to the bigwigs at Activision Blizzard the service is still in the infant stages of re-development with "social networking features, cross-game communication, unified account management" and more being added to the service. Bobby Kotick stated that the service would be "similar to Xbox Live". Hopefully the term was used for that service's perceived quality, and not the monetary fee associated with it. Either way, it appears that BNet 2.0 will be just another gaming service to keep track of. Sigh.
- Collegehumor WoW video - My friend turned me on to this World of Warcraft-based video last night, and it is absolutely hilarious. He claims that "that's what it will be like in five years" and although I wish it were true, I just don't believe it. Thankfully, the laughs it gets are on purpose. The video is safe for work.
Blizzard Switches World of Warcraft Partner in China
In press release earlier today, Blizzard announced that, in China, World of Warcraft will be licensed to NetEase.com, who already has the rights to operate both Starcraft II and Diablo III. Once Blizzard's current deal with The9 expires in June, NetEase will take over the operation of WoW in China, with further details to be announced on their website. According to a VentureBeat article, that means Blizzard's cut of revenue from WoW in China will increase from about $50 million per year over $140 million per year, almost purely profit. It will be interesting to see if this means that Wrath of the Lich King will be coming soon for China, because they still have yet to see it released. This is a reminder of how, although WoW is a huge and global game, we aren't even able to interact in game with nearly everyone due to restrictions like different regions, languages, and servers that the game is played on. In the Totally Rad Guild, we have people from all over the United States, Canada, Australia, and probably more that I don't even know about. So how about you guys - where are you gaming from?
Blizzard Developing a Fifth Unnanounced Title
We know Blizzard is developing a third expansion for World of Warcraft. We know they're developing Diablo III, Starcraft II, and a nameless next-gen MMO. As it turns out, they're also developing a fifth project that will use a completely new engine built from scratch. Silicon Alley Insider reported on a post on DIII.net as they discovered a few job listings filed under "Unannounced Project," which is a different category from the "Next-Gen MMO" that has been used for Blizzards upcoming unnamed MMO. A couple of days later, there was confirmation that the job listings were for a game that had previously not been mentioned:
The job openings mentioned in this newspost is indeed a brand-new game that has not been mentioned before. 1. This brand-new game is not a World of Warcraft expansion, and it is not related to the Next-Gen MMO. 2. In the present, the brand-new game is using the World of Warcraft engine merely for testing purposes. 3. The Client Software Engineer job opening is to hire the person that will have the responsibility to develop an engine from scratch for this game. This new engine will be built depending on the skill and interest of the person hired for this position. Whether this game is based on the three major franchises (Warcraft, Starcraft or Diablo) or a new IP, that remains unknown.Blizzard has expressed plenty of interest in starting a new franchise, so it wouldn't be too surprising to learn that this new project was completely unrelated to their other works. On the flip side, it would be interesting to see a new Warcraft-related game. What could it possibly be? What are your thoughts? Excited at the prospect of new Blizzard games every year? Nervous that Blizzard may be spreading itself too thin? Silicon Alley Insider sees it as a great new revenue stream for Activision. I just can't wait to see what else Blizzard has up its sleeve.
Battle.net Unites Blizzard Games
We saw a glimmer of this when installing Wrath, and its now beginning. Players now have the option to create an overarching Battle.net account and link all of their Blizzard games together. This may become mandatory in the future. After registering, you can "merge" your WoW account and your Battle.net account. Whenever you login to WoW, you then use your Battle.net credentials, namely the email address you used for your Battle.net account and your new password. Login for the non-WoW Blizzard games still uses their existing logon system and they will not (yet?) accept the new Battle.net credentials. You can add StarCraft Anthology, Warcraft III, Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne, Warcraft Battle Chest, Diablo II, Diablo II: Lord of Destruction, and Diablo II Battle Chest into your Battle.net account by providing the site with your CD key. You can also buy a CD key online from the Blizzard store. You are then able to download the fully patched game to your computer using the standard Blizzard downloader used for all WoW patches and media, and in the future there may be more integrated features to unify the games. Warcraft II Battle.net edition is notably not on the list. In the future, its likely that we will see "account wide achievements" and other such things. Its unclear how or if the older games will play into this, but you can be certain that Starcraft II, Diablo III, and the currently unannounced MMO that Blizzard is working on will use the new Battle.net heavily. Warcraft II, Warcraft III, Diablo II, and Starcraft all shared the same Battle.net servers and game channels could be joined by anyone from any of those games. I'd love to see WoW join in on this, as I still hop on Warcraft III and Starcraft once in a while and would like to chat with players across all of these games. In addition, Blizzard annouced that the highly popular Blizzard authenticator will be available as an application for mobile devices, namely the iPhone and iPod touch. Its a great piece of equipment that improves account security. It is being re-branded as the Battle.net authenticator. The authenticator will work with all Battle.net games. Downloadable software is much easier to keep in stock than hardware, so hopefully this will provide players with a venue to get an authenticator. Price is not yet announced, and it may be free to increase account security. Since mobile devices (especially the iPod) must authenticate over the internet, I don't think its unlikely that an exploit to replicate the authenticator will happen at some point in the future.