- This article is about the expansion pack. For the core RTS game, see Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos. For the physical throne, see Frozen Throne. For other uses, see Warcraft III (disambiguation).
Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne | |
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Developer(s) |
Blizzard Entertainment Team 1 |
Publisher(s) |
NA: Blizzard Entertainment EU: Sierra Entertainment JP: Capcom KO: Sonokong |
Director(s) | Frank Pearce |
Producer(s) | Chris Sigaty |
Designer(s) | Rob Pardo |
Writer(s) | Chris Metzen |
Composer(s) |
Tracy W. Bush Victor Crews Derek Duke Jason Hayes Glenn Stafford |
Platforms | Microsoft Windows, Mac OS, and Mac OS X |
Release |
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Latest release | 1.31.1 (2019-06-19), last version before |
Genre(s) | Real-time strategy |
Mode(s) | Single player, multiplayer |
Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne (sometimes abbreviated to TFT) is an expansion pack of Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos developed for Microsoft Windows, Mac OS and Mac OS X by Blizzard Entertainment. Released in stores worldwide in multiple languages beginning on 1 July 2003,[1] it details Arthas' transformation into the Lich King, Illidan's awakening of the naga, the conversion of the blood elves, the breakdown of Horde-Alliance relations in Kalimdor, and more. The Frozen Throne takes place approximately one year after Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos, whilst World of Warcraft takes place three years after the events detailed in The Frozen Throne.
The Frozen Throne continues some of the loose ends of the original game, as well as spins off some new plots of its own and paves way for the new conflict of World of Warcraft, as well as set plots further explored in World of Warcraft's expansions: World of Warcraft: The Burning Crusade and World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King.
Additions[]
- For each race, The Frozen Throne adds several new units, buildings and upgrades, and one new hero per race.
- The entirely new race "Naga" has also been added, and can be played in several Sentinel and Alliance missions, as well as in custom maps. A smaller race, the Draenei, have also been included, though they can only be played in an Alliance mission and custom maps.
- The old siege engines of the humans, orcs and night elves have been renamed and remodeled, receiving new upgrades in the process.
- Wyvern Riders were renamed Wind Riders, but the unit was otherwise unchanged.
- Gold and lumber costs were recalculated, generally requiring more lumber for high-tech buildings and units; consequentially, the population limit was been increased from 90 to 100 to accommodate additional lumber-gathering workers.
- The Frozen Throne reintroduced naval units into the game, (they had been present in Warcraft II but were absent in Reign of Chaos) as well as amphibious creatures. Most aquatic mechanics were only available in the single-player campaign, but some creeps and the neutral Goblin Shipyard made island maps a viable template in melee matches. (Such maps became unpopular and were removed from the ladder selection).
- New item mechanics were added, such as the neutral Marketplace, which sells a rotating inventory of items, player built shops, and inventory upgrades for non-hero units.
- The expansion and its subsequent patches made the addition of neutral Hero units. Neutral heroes can be used in melee maps via the Tavern, a neutral building to hire them. The tavern can also instantly revive any fallen hero, with an increased resource cost, and reduced health and mana of the revived hero. A nearby unit is needed to access the tavern.
- Five new tilesets were added, each with its own set of creeps and critters. New doodads were included in old tilesets.
- The World Editor program was greatly expanded, allowing the user to do more custom work with regards to editing skills, doodads, and upgrades. Support for importing custom files into maps was added, as well as the creation of custom campaigns with campaign-specific data. An AI editor was also created for the expansion.
Story[]
Sentinels Campaign: Terror of the Tides[]
- Main article: Terror of the Tides
The Warden Maiev Shadowsong pursues the former prisoner Illidan Stormrage across Azeroth. Illidan has gained the allegiance of the naga, former night elves who adapted to underwater life, but they do not stop Maiev, who pursues Illidan from Kalimdor to the Tomb of Sargeras, then all the way to Lordaeron. During her chase, she asks the assistance of Malfurion Stormrage and Tyrande Whisperwind, but Maiev holds a grudge against Tyrande for her actions in releasing Illidan in the first place, culminating in her lying about Tyrande's death to Malfurion. Malfurion and Maiev successfully prevent Illidan from using the Eye of Sargeras, with the help of a blood elf, Kael'thas Sunstrider, but in the process, Maiev's treachery comes out, and the brothers Stormrage join forces to save their mutual beloved. Malfurion then pardons Illidan, though he does not revoke his exile, and Illidan departs...with Maiev still dogging at his heels.
Alliance Campaign: Curse of the Blood Elves[]
- Main article: Curse of the Blood Elves
The Alliance Campaign (the humans are not the main characters) follows the adventures of Prince Kael'thas, leader of the blood elves, a group of high elves that survived the invasion of Quel'Thalas by the Scourge. Originally helping the Alliance, the Blood Elves are imprisoned by a Human knight, Lord Garithos, and are eventually rescued by Lady Vashj and her Naga. Vashj then takes Kael'thas to the Outland, the remnants of the orc realm Draenor, to meet (and free) their master, Illidan. After fending off Maiev (again) and gaining the allegiance of the native Draenei, Illidan is able to conquer the Outland, where he hopes he will be safe from his failure to use the Eye of Sargeras to destroy the Frozen Throne. But his master, the demon lord Kil'jaeden, catches them nonetheless, and the episode ends with Illidan renewing his vow to destroy the Lich King.
The human forces in this campaign are very different than the ones used in the multiplayer game. Instead of the full Alliance, only the blood elven units are available, with the addition of a few new units and a blood elf hero added to the expansion pack. The draenei and the naga, with their lone heroes, are also eventually playable.
Scourge Campaign: Legacy of the Damned[]
- Main article: Legacy of the Damned
In the blighted lands of Lordaeron, now known as the Plaguelands, a civil war is taking place within the Scourge. The undead forces splinter into three major factions: Arthas and Kel'Thuzad, who are loyal to the Lich King; the Forsaken, led by the Banshee Queen Sylvanas Windrunner; and a third group still loyal to the Burning Legion, led by the Dreadlords (Nathrezim) who are unaware of the Legion's defeat on Mount Hyjal. The campaign switches between Arthas' journey to Northrend to assist the Lich King, and Sylvanas' war against the Dreadlords for control of the Plaguelands. In the end, Sylvanas emerges as the nominal ruler of the Plaguelands, while Arthas travels to Northrend to defend the Lich King, meeting the subterranean Nerubian race, and eventually defeating Illidan in a one-on-one duel. (Contrary to popular belief, Illidan survived.) Arthas then ascends to the Frozen Throne and becomes one with the Lich King. What becomes of this unholy meeting is addressed in World of Warcraft.
Bonus Campaign: The Founding of Durotar[]
- Main article: The Founding of Durotar
The Bonus Campaign is a departure from the rest of the game and featured the three longest campaigns in the game. It has features more like an RPG similar to Diablo, featuring a Beastmaster named Rexxar as he helps the orcs defend and develop their new home of Durotar from various enemies. The Bonus Campaign is probably meant as a bridge between the traditional Warcraft real-time strategy genre to the latest release of Blizzard, the MMORPG of World of Warcraft. It was also created because the game's designers were having trouble getting the orcs involved in the main plot of The Frozen Throne, and the RPG-style allowed Blizzard to show off many of the new features added in the World Editor, as an example of how custom maps can differ greatly from standard melee maps.
The player controls a group of two to four heroes, primarily Rexxar and a troll Shadow Hunter named Rokhan. The player can also gain permanent control of a pandaren Brewmaster named Chen Stormstout and tauren Chieftain Cairne Bloodhoof, and temporary control of Far Seer Drek'Thar, Blademaster Samuro, Jaina Proudmoore, and Cairne's son, Baine Bloodhoof. Maps are interconnected, with each one being set up as various areas of Kalimdor, such as the orc fortress city of Orgrimmar, and a human city on the Theramore Isles.
Initially only one of the three acts was included in the game, allowing Blizzard to spend more time on the remaining two after release. Each act was expected to be released in a subsequent patch, but due to delays in patch development, they were both finished and included in the first major patch in the expansion.
Manual[]
Development[]
Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne was originally announced on 22 January 2003.[2] On 14 February 2003, Blizzard announced the first beta test for the game, which offered 10,000 players to sample the game.[3] On 10 March 2003, 10,000 more players were selected to participate in the beta test.[4] On 29 May 2003, Blizzard announced that the expansion set had "gone gold", and was released in 1 July 2003.
The Frozen Throne started at the version 1.07 of the game (by the time the game actually shipped patch 1.10 was downloadable), but there have been many patches after the expansion was released. Important changes, beside gameplay and World Editor changes, include the addition of some new maps in patches 1.17, 1.18, 1.19, 1.21 and 1.22; and the new neutral heroes Tinker, Alchemist and Firelord in patches 1.15 and 1.17. In patch 1.13 the Acts II and III of the Bonus campaign were added. The patch 1.21b allowed the game to be played without the official CD.
Due to the patch 1.23, many third-party programs were rendered unusable and it also disabled collided maps, which would make modified custom maps appear to be the same as the original. Another effect of the patch, which is not included in the release notes, is that custom maps with large filenames will not appear in the game. The limit is believed to be 20 characters, but this has not yet been tested.
The 1.23 patch included no actual changes to gameplay but rather dealt with security concerns relating to multiplayer hacks. The 1.24 patch and the subsequent and the 1.24a, 1.24b and 1.24c patches followed suit, also dealing with malicious code that could be contained in custom maps. Consequentially, many older maps using custom text rather than standard triggers may no longer work until updated. Hash Tables were added to the World Editor to compensate for some of the lost functionality. In April 2018, Blizzard integrated proper widescreen support for the first time, more than 15 years after the game's original release.
Legacy[]
The Frozen Throne's Horde campaign lays the groundwork for World of Warcraft with many of the player's actions in the campaign being later explored in the MMORPG.
Awards[]
The Frozen Throne has an average rating of 90.75% on Game Rankings.[5]
System Requirements[]
Minimum System Requirements[6] | ||
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PC | Mac® | |
Computer | 400 MHz Pentium® II or equivalent. | 400 MHz G3 processor or better. |
Operating Systems | Windows® XP or Windows Vista® | Mac® OS X 10.3.9 or higher |
Memory | 128 MB of RAM | 128 MB of RAM |
Controls | A keyboard and mouse are required. | A keyboard and mouse are required. |
Drives | A hard drive with at least 550 MB of free space (in addition to your Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos installation), and a 4x speed CD-ROM drive are required for installation and play. | A hard drive with at least 550 MB of free space (in addition to your Warcraft III: Reign of Chaos isntallation), and a 4x speed CD-ROM drive are required for installation and play. |
Video | 8MB 3D video card (TNT, i810, Voodoo 3, Rage 128 equivalent or better) with DirectX 8.1 support. | A video card consisting of an ATI Technologies or nVidia chipset with at least 16 MB of memory is required. |
Sound | A DirectX compatible 16-bit sound card is recommended. | Warcraft III will work with the built-in sound features of the Mac OS®. |
Multiplayer Connectivity | Access to Blizzard Entertainment's online gaming service, Battle.net, requires a low-latency, active internet connection rated at 28.8 Kbps or faster. Multi-player games played over a LAN require an active connection to a TCP/IP network. | Access to Blizzard Entertainment's online gaming service, Battle.net, requires a low-latency, active internet connection rated at 28.8 Kbps or faster. Multi-player games played over a LAN require an active connection to a TCP/IP network. |
Recommended System Requirements[6] | ||
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PC | Mac® | |
Computer | 600 MHz processor or better. | 600 MHz G3 processor or better. |
Memory | 256 MB of RAM | 256 MB of RAM |
Video | 32 MB 3D Video card | 32 MB 3D Video card |
Trivia[]
- Since the announcement of Warcraft III: Reforged, The Frozen Throne and its base game are collectively referred to as Warcraft III: Classic.[7][8]
Gallery[]
Videos[]
- ''Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne'' cinematic
- Arthas Menethil defeats Illidan Stormrage
- Arthas Menethil merges with the Lich King
References[]
- ^ http://www.gamespot.com/pc/strategy/warcraft3thefrozenthrone/index.html
- ^ Warcraft III expansion revealed - PC News at GameSpot
- ^ Warcraft III expansion beta soon - PC News at GameSpot
- ^ The Frozen Throne beta expands - PC News at GameSpot
- ^ Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne on Game Rankings
- ^ a b Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne Game Manual, page 3 & 4.
- ^ Can't Purchase Warcraft III: Classic. Blizzard Entertainment.
- ^ No Warcraft III: Classic Access from Warcraft III: Reforged Prepurchase. Blizzard Entertainment.
External links[]
- Blizzard Entertainment Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne page [dead link - archived copy]
- Blizzard Entertainment Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne store page
- maps.w3reforged.com Custom map database
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