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+ | *[[World of Warcraft Standard Edition|Standard]] |
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| this-expansion = 2004 |
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| next-expansion = ''[[World of Warcraft: The Burning Crusade|The Burning Crusade]]''<br />(2007) |
| next-expansion = ''[[World of Warcraft: The Burning Crusade|The Burning Crusade]]''<br />(2007) |
Revision as of 21:52, 1 November 2019
- For the classic server option dedicated to emulate the original experience, see World of Warcraft: Classic.
World of Warcraft | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||
Developer(s) |
Blizzard Entertainment After release: Team 2 | |||
Publisher(s) | Blizzard Entertaiment[1] | |||
Designer(s) |
Rob Pardo Jeff Kaplan Tom Chilton | |||
Composer(s) |
Jason Hayes Tracy W. Bush Derek Duke Glenn Stafford | |||
Platforms | Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, (Linux via Wine or Cedega) | |||
Release |
NA: November 23, 2004 EU: February 11, 2005 CN: June 7, 2006 | |||
Latest release |
NA: 1.12.1 EU: 1.12.2 CN: 1.12.3 | |||
Genre(s) | Massively multiplayer online role-playing | |||
Mode(s) | Multiplayer | |||
|
World of Warcraft, often abbreviated as WoW (or, when referring to the original game, vanilla, classic, or pre-BC), is a massively multiplayer online roleplaying game (MMORPG) developed by Blizzard Entertainment and released on November 23, 2004, on the 10th anniversary of the Warcraft franchise, three years after its announcement on September 2, 2001.[2] It is the fourth released game set in the Warcraft universe, and takes place four years after the events of Warcraft III: The Frozen Throne.[3]
Selected World of Warcraft articles
- Instances by continent
- Instance grouping guide
- Newbie guide
- Choosing a class
- Travel guide
- Talent builds
- For many more, visit guides
Plot
Four years after the Battle of Mount Hyjal, tensions between the Alliance and the Horde begin to arise once again.[4]
Intent on settling the arid region of Durotar, Thrall's new Horde expanded its ranks, inviting the undead Forsaken to join orcs, tauren, and trolls.
Meanwhile, dwarves, gnomes and the ancient night elves pledged their loyalties to a reinvigorated Alliance, guided by the human kingdom of Stormwind. After Stormwind's king, Varian Wrynn, mysteriously disappeared, Highlord Bolvar Fordragon served as Regent but his service was marred by the manipulations and mind control of the black dragon Onyxia, who ruled in disguise as a human noblewoman.
As heroes investigated Onyxia's manipulations, ancient foes surfaced in lands throughout the world to menace Horde and Alliance alike.[5]
Updates
There have been seven expansions to World of Warcraft:
- The Burning Crusade was released on January 16, 2007.[6]
- Wrath of the Lich King was released on November 13, 2008.[7]
- Cataclysm was released on December 7, 2010.[8]
- Mists of Pandaria was released on September 25, 2012,[9]
- Warlords of Draenor was released on November 13, 2014.[10]
- Legion was released on August 30, 2016.[11]
- Battle for Azeroth was released on August 14, 2018.[12]
Additionally, World of Warcraft: Classic, released on August 27, 2019,[13] provides a way to experience the game as it was before any expansions.
Over time, the game's expansions have been integrated into the base game. With the release of Battle for Azeroth, all World of Warcraft subscribers (or those with game time) automatically have access to all of the content and features of all the expansions up to Legion at no additional cost. The Battle Chest is no longer in production.[14]
Further story development is also made throughout its franchising, via online media, novels, comics, manga, RPG books, Trading Card Game, and board games.
Account levels
- Main article: Account#World of Warcraft account levels
- World of Warcraft Starter Edition - Try World of Warcraft for Free - level to 20.
- World of Warcraft: Subscription (monthly payment) - level to 110.
- World of Warcraft: Battle for Azeroth (accessible since august 14) - level to 120 - requires subscription.
Features
Player Customization
- 2 factions: Horde and Alliance.
- 13 races: Human, Dwarf, Gnome, Night Elf, Orc, Troll, Undead, Tauren, Blood Elf, Draenei, Goblin Worgen, Pandaren.
- pre-purchase of Battle for Azeroth gave early access to recruit 4 allied races: Void elf, Lightforged draenei, Nightborne, Highmountain tauren.
- 4 more allied races: Dark Iron dwarf, Mag'har orc, Kul Tiran, and Zandalari troll
- 12 classes: Mage, Warlock, Priest, Rogue, Druid, Hunter, Shaman, Warrior, Paladin, Death Knight, Monk, Demon Hunter.
- 14 professions, enabling resource gathering and item crafting:
- 11 primary professions: Herbalism, Mining, Skinning, Alchemy, Blacksmithing, Enchanting, Engineering, Leatherworking, Tailoring, Jewelcrafting, Inscription.
- 3 secondary professions: Cooking, Fishing, Archaeology.
- (First Aid, a secondary profession was removed with Battle for Azeroth)
- Different specializations for each class that define the player's abilities, strengths and role in the game.
- The talent system allows customization of the character's passive and active abilities.
- Glyphs are additionally used to customize the character's abilities.
Gameplay System
- General System
- A casual-friendly character progression system.
- Being offline (resting) increases your experience points gain.
- In-game trading, mail service, auction system, text and voice chat.
- Two server types: Normal and RP.
- PvE and PvP Systems
- PvE System:
- Thousands of quests.
- Dungeons, Raids, and Scenarios.
- Island expedition scenarios.
- Invasion Point scenarios (level 110).
- Warfront scenarios.
- Garrisons (level range 90-100) and Class Order Halls (level range 100-110).
- Challenging solo only content: Brawler's Guild and Mage Tower Challenges (level 110).
- PvP Honor system:
- PVP talent system.
- Turn on or off War Mode for PvP in the open world.
- 13 Battlegrounds: Warsong Gulch, Arathi Basin, Alterac Valley, Eye of the Storm, Isle of Conquest, Battle for Gilneas, Twin Peaks, Silvershard Mines, Temple of Kotmogu, Deepwind Gorge, Seething Shore, Battle for Wintergrasp, Ashran.
- PvP Brawls with only 1 accessible a week in weekly rotation.
- ( Strand of the Ancients a battleground was removed with Battle for Azeroth)
- Arena PVP System for 2v2, 3v3, and 5v5 intense, small area combat (12 different PVP arena locations).
- PvP objective world quests.
- Dueler's Guild.
- PvP difficulty island expeditions.
- A variety of seasonal world events: Darkmoon Faire, Children's Week, Midsummer Fire Festival, Love is in the air, Feast of Winter Veil, and more.
- More events were added in later expansions: Brewfest, Pirates' Day, Day of the Dead, and Pilgrim's Bounty.
- Unique one-time events: Gates of Ahn'Qiraj, Scourge Invasion, Dark Portal opening event, World of Warcraft anniversaries, and others.
- Micro-holidays (patch 7.1.5): including Call of the Scarab, Hatching of the Hippogryphs, Glowcap Festival, and others.
- Continues and expands the lore from the Warcraft universe.
- Streamlined questlines and NPC-voiced storytelling.
- User Interface and Customer Support
- Customize AddOn and Interface with some game commands support.
- Client seamlessly supports both Mac and Windows operating systems. Linux users can play via Wine, however this is not supported and can be buggy at times.
Availability
- North America (English-US - US & Canada)
- Oceania (English-US - Australia, Hawaii, New Zealand)
- Latin America (Spanish)
- Brazil (Portuguese-Brazilian)
- Europe (English-UK, French, German, Spanish, Russian, Portuguese-Brazilian, Italian)
- South Korea
- China (Simplified and Traditional Chinese; including Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, and the regions of Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Macau)
Subscriber numbers
World of Warcraft's subscriber numbers have fluctuated tremendously over the years. With a peak of 12 million monthly subscribers in October 2010,[15] World of Warcraft remains among the most popular MMORPGs[7][16] and holds the Guinness World Record for the world's most popular subscription-based MMORPG.[17][18][19][20] Though World of Warcraft had dropped to 7.4 million subscribers as of the release of Patch 6.0.2[21], when the Warlords of Draenor expansion released a few weeks later it briefly jumped all the way back up to 10 million[22] before settling back down to 7.1 million.[23] In the final report in October 2015, there were 5.5 million subscribers.[24]
In January 2014 it was announced that more than 100 million accounts and 500 million characters had been created over the game's lifetime, with players in 244 different countries.[25][26]
In November 2015 Blizzard announced that they would no longer give regular updates of subscriber numbers, as they felt there were better performance metrics they could use.[27] For a graphical representation of subscriber numbers up to November 2015, click here.
Date | Subscribers |
---|---|
December 2004 | 400 thousand |
March 2005 | 1.5 million |
June 2005 | 3.25 million |
September 2005 | 4.25 million |
December 2005 | 5.6 million |
March 2006 | 6.4 million |
June 2006 | 6.6 million |
September 2006 | 7 million |
January 2007 | 8 million |
March 2007 | 8.5 million |
June 2007 | 8.8 million |
December 2007 | 9.75 million |
February 2008 | 10.2 million |
October 2008 | 11 million |
December 2008 | 11.5 million |
March 2009 | 11.5 million |
December 2009 | 11.5 million |
October 2010 | 12 million |
March 2011 | 11.4 million |
June 2011 | 11.1 million |
September 2011 | 10.3 million |
December 2011 | 10.2 million |
July 2012 | 9.1 million |
September 2012 | 10 million |
December 2012 | 9.6 million |
March 2013 | 8.3 million |
June 2013 | 7.7 million |
September 2013 | 7.6 million |
December 2013 | 7.8 million |
March 2014 | 7.6 million |
July 2014 | 6.8 million |
October 2014 | 7.4 million |
November 2014 | 10 million |
December 2014 | 10 million |
March 2015 | 7.1 million |
July 2015 | 5.6 million |
November 2015 | 5.5 million |
Awards
- Main article: Blizzard Entertainment
System requirements
- Main article: System requirements
Development
- See also: World of Warcraft evolution guide
Nomad
The history of World of Warcraft has its origins in Project Nomad. Accounts differ as to the timing of this project, some stating that work began on it after the release of StarCraft,[28] others that development on the game had begun prior to the "crunch period" of StarCraft's development, and as a result, developers were transferred to work on the RTS game.[29] Nomad itself was to be a sci-fi squad-based shooter, some of its developers taking inspiration from Necromunda, others from Final Fantasy.[30] Those in the former camp conceptualized a squad-based game where players would build up squads of soldiers, upgrade their abilities, find new guns, and go online to challenge other players' armies. Those in the latter camp wanted an adventure/RPG game.[31]
The lack of direction didn't help and the game was scrapped in favor of World of Warcraft.[30] During development, Kevin Beardslee and Bill Petras wanted to make something else entirely different from what Nomad was, specifically a more accessible version of EverQuest. Nomad was scrapped and development on World of Warcraft began two days later.[31]
Pre-release
Development of World of Warcraft was first announced in September 2001[32] at the ECTS tradeshow. There was little fanfare in the original announcement, and the original development team consisted of around fifty individuals.[33] Inspiration was taken from other MMOs such as Ultima Online and EverQuest, using the lore and characters of Warcraft as the basis for the setting. It would be a risky venture, as the company had grown used to games passing the 1 million sales mark, whereas EverQuest had peaked at the 500,000 subscriber mark. While a subscription fee would help recoup costs, there was unease as to whether the game's reception would be as positive as Blizzard's previous games,[34] and it was thought that the game would only appeal to pre-existing Warcraft fans.[33] Furthermore, few members of Blizzard had experience in developing MMOs, and while they enjoyed playing them, there was fears that the game would be overshadowed by Star Wars Galaxies and EverQuest 2. When the game was first announced, members of the press often asked Blizzard as such, seeing them as "the RTS company."[35]
By 2002, the game's visual design was being worked on.[36] There was initial pushback in Blizzard as to the Alliance/Horde faction divide, as some feared that some players wouldn't like it because they couldn't play with friends (if they chose different factions).[37]
The game originally had a true to life day-night cycle, which dictated when events and spawns would happen. This idea was scrapped so that players wouldn't have to disrupt their real lives to do these time-specific activities.[38]
The game had a significant "crunch period" of development.[39]
Post-release
The game released in late 2004. Surpassing expectations, the game had reached 5 million subscribers by the end of 2005. Blizzard had to develop tech and customer support on the fly in order to keep up with the demand.[34] In 2007, Blizzard predicted that the game would last for five more years, which spurred them to develop Titan as their successive MMO.[40]
As of 2014, Blizzard's intended development pattern is to keep content at a relatively steady pace—still producing expansions, but with shorter gaps between content implementation.[41] The game has been likened to a sandbox with content being added over time.[42] Expansions are planned out in advance, with narrative threads in one expansion leading to events in the next.[43]
On October 30, 2014, lead designer Ion Hazzikostas stated that World of Warcraft will still be around at its 20th anniversary, in 2024.[44]
As of June 2016, the World of Warcraft team comprises around 235 people.[45]
Creatures
World of Warcraft is inhabited by a large number of creatures.
The following creatures were added in Vanilla World of Warcraft before the release of expansions:
- Humanoids
- Centaur
- Dryad
- Earthen
- Elves
- Flamewaker
- Furbolg
- Gargoyle
- Gnoll
- Gnome
- Goblin
- Grell
- Harpy
- Human
- Keeper of the grove
- Kobold
- Lost one
- Makrura
- Mok'nathal (in Vanilla introduced as a single NPC)
- Murloc
- Naga
- Ogre
- Orc
- Qiraji
- Quilboar
- Tauren
- Trogg
- Trolls
- Forest troll
- Ice troll
- Jungle troll
- Sand troll
- Jungle trolls shapeshifted into unique cat & snake humanoid forms as well as individual bat & spider forms that resemble a gargoyle & nerubian
- Zandalari troll
- Dire troll (in Vanilla found among forest, ice, jungle & zandalari trolls)
- Wendigo/Yeti
- Wildkin
- Worgen
- Giants
- Beasts
- Basilisk
- Bat
- Bear
- Panda (in Vanilla Collector's Edition: Panda Collar)
- Beetle
- Buzzard
- Cat
- Chicken
- Chimaera
- Clam (as a intractable item)
- Core hound
- Cow
- Coyote
- Crab
- Crocolisk
- Darkhound
- Deer
- Dinosaurs
- Fish
- Frog
- Gazelle
- Gorilla
- Giraffe
- Gryphon
- Hippogryph
- Horse
- Hydra
- Hyena
- Kodo
- Larva
- Owl
- Pig
- Rabbit
- Rat
- Roach
- Sand reaver
- Sea lion
- Scorpid
- Sheep
- Snake
- Spider
- Silithid
- Squirrel
- Tallstrider
- Thunder lizard
- Turtle
- Two-headed dog-like beast
- Wind serpent
- Wolf
- Worm
- Wyvern
- Zhevra
- Dragonkin
- Dragon (in Vanilla five types)
- Whelp & Drake (younger versions of dragons)
- Chromatic whelp & drake
- Plagued whelp
- Whelp & Drake (younger versions of dragons)
- Drakeadon
- Drakonid (in Vanilla six types)
- Dragonspawn (in Vanilla six types)
- Faerie dragon
- Demons
- Demonhunter
- Doomguard
- Dreadlord
- Eye of Kilrogg
- Felguard
- Felhound
- Felsteed
- Imp
- Infernal
- Satyr
- Succubus
- Void hound
- Undead
- Abomination
- Flesh giant (cyborg type in Vanilla)
- Flesh titan
- Plague-dog
- Animated weapons
- Banshee
- Bone golem
- Crypt fiend
- Crypt lord
- Frost wyrm
- Ghost
- Lich
- Mur'ghoul
- Shade
- Skeletal horse
- Skeletal wind serpent
- Spirit Healer
- Undead gnoll
- Undead high elf (in Vanilla introduced as a single NPC)
- Undead human
- Undead quilboar
- Undead troll
- Wight
- Wisp
- Wraith
- Mechanical
- Alarm-O-Bot
- Bombling
- Crowd pummeler
- Harvest golem
- Mechanical chicken
- Mechanical dragonling
- Mechanical gorilla
- Mechanical sheep
- Mechanical squirrel
- Mechanostrider
- Elemental
- Aberration
And many creatures are added in each World of Warcraft expansion:
- World of Warcraft: The Burning Crusade#New creatures
- World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King #New creatures
- World of Warcraft: Cataclysm#New creatures
- World of Warcraft: Mists of Pandaria#New creatures
- World of Warcraft: Warlords of Draenor#New creatures
- World of Warcraft: Legion#New creatures
- World of Warcraft: Battle for Azeroth#New creatures
Trivia
- The introduction of Warcraft: Orcs & Humans already greeted the player by welcoming him into the "World of Warcraft". Before its cancellation, the tagline of Warcraft Adventures: Lord of the Clans was also supposed to be "An Adventure Game in the World of WarCraft".
- Blizzard has considered making a "World of Warcraft 2" since 2004.[46] J. Allen Brack has expressed doubts about the possibility of a sequel, stating that "there’s not really a great model for a successful sequel MMO."[47]
- In China, many models had to be edited due to not being allowed to show bones. For some examples, see the trivia sections of Lord Marrowgar, Sindragosa, [Winged Steed of the Ebon Blade] and Forsaken. Bones and skulls are usually replaced by loaves of bread.
- Carbot Animations made cartoon-styled parodies of World of Warcraft called WowCraft.
- World of Warcraft appears in the book, "1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die".
- In 2018, World of Warcraft was #41 on IGN's Top 100 Video Games of All Time.
- World of Warcraft is featured at the Computer History Museum's Make Software: Change the World! exhibit since they opened in January 2017.
- On page 204 of the World of Warcraft instruction manual, the "Additional Thanks" section includes "Happy 30th to RUSH".
Videos
- ''World of Warcraft'' Trailer
- ''World of Warcraft'' Gameplay 1
- ''World of Warcraft'' Gameplay 2
- ''World of Warcraft'' Gameplay 3
- ''World of Warcraft'' Gameplay 4
- ''World of Warcraft'' Gameplay 5
- ''World of Warcraft'' Gameplay 6
- ''World of Warcraft'' Gameplay 7
- ''World of Warcraft'' Cinematic
- ''World of Warcraft'' Cinematic Enhanced to 4K
- ''World of Warcraft'' TV Spot
- Patch 1.1.0 - Onyxia's Lair Trailer
- Patch 1.5.0 - Battlegrounds: Warsong Gulch
- Patch 1.6.0 - Assault on Blackwing Lair
- Patch 1.6.0 - Darkmoon Faire Trailer
- Patch 1.7.0 - Rise of the Blood God
- Patch 1.7.0 - Battlegrounds: Arathi Basin
- Patch 1.9.0 - The Gates of Ahn'Qiraj
- Patch 1.10.0 - Storms of Azeroth #1
- Patch 1.10.0 - Storms of Azeroth #2
- Patch 1.11.0 - Shadow of the Necropolis
- Patch 1.12.0 - Drums of War
- 8 years of WoW
Notes
The gameplay video displayed is the first, released on November 23, 2004. Other videos were also made before the European release.
See also
- Game manual
- Loading screen
- A listing of World of Warcraft-related sites.
- World of Warcraft Mac OS X Icons
- Timeline (World of Warcraft) for a timeline of game milestones since its announcement.
- The World of Warcraft Townhall
References
- ^ The Activision/Blizzard Merger: Five Key Points. Industry News (2007-12-03). Archived from the original on 2008-12-21. Retrieved on 2018-03-05.
- ^ Blizzard Entertainment announces World of Warcraft. Games Fusion (2003-09-05). Archived from the original on 2007-11-03. Retrieved on 2018-03-06.
- ^ Fiction Timeline. Blizzard Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2010-12-04. Retrieved on 2018-03-06.
- ^ WoW official trailer
- ^ Story of Warcraft: chapter 8
- ^ World of Warcraft: The Burning Crusade shatters day-1 sales record. Blizzard Entertainment (2007-01-23). Archived from the original on 2007-01-26. Retrieved on 2018-03-05.
- ^ a b World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King Shatters Day-1 Sales Record. Blizzard Entertainment (2008-01-23). Archived from the original on 2008-02-26. Retrieved on 2018-03-06.
- ^ World of Warcraftft®: Cataclysm™ In Stores Starting December 7. Blizzard Entertainment (2010-10-04). Retrieved on 2010-10-04.
- ^ Mists of Pandaria Launches September 25, 2012 – Pre-Sales NOW OPEN. Blizzard Entertainment (2012-07-25). Archived from the original on 2018-03-05. Retrieved on 2018-03-15.
- ^ Warlords of Draenor Launches 11/13—Watch the Cinematic & Lords of War: Part One Now!. Blizzard Entertainment (2014-08-14). Retrieved on 2018-03-05.
- ^ Andy Chalk 2016-04-19. World of Warcraft: Legion will arrive in August. PC Gamer. Archived from the original on 2016-04-20. Retrieved on 2018-03-06.
- ^ Battle for Azeroth™: One Launch to Rule Them All. Blizzard Entertainment (2018-06-07). Retrieved on 2018-06-07.
- ^ Mike Minotti 2017-11-03. WoW Classic Launch and Testing Schedule. Venture Beat. Retrieved on 2018-03-06.
- ^ Ryan Burgess 2018-07-18. All expansions up to Legion now included in World of Warcraft subscription. KitGuru. Retrieved on 2019-05-11.
- ^ WORLD OF WARCRAFT® SUBSCRIBER BASE REACHES 12 MILLION WORLDWIDE.
- ^ GigaOM Top 10 Most Popular MMOs. Gigaom (2007-06-13). Archived from the original on 2010-07-01. Retrieved on 2018-03-06.
- ^ Guinness World Records Gamer's Edition - Records - PC Gaming. Archived from the original on 2008-04-05. Retrieved on 2009-10-17.
- ^ [Craig]. Guinness World Records 2009, 241. ISBN 9780553592566. “Most popular MMORPG game(sic) In terms of the number of online subscribers, World of Warcraft is the most popular Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Game (MMORPG), with 10 million subscribers as of January 2008.”
- ^ Becky Williams 2009-08-24. Video: Backstage at BlizzCon 2009:Thousands of World of Warcraft fans descend on southern California for Blizzard's epic gaming convention. The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 2009-09-01. Retrieved on 2018-03-06.
- ^ Mark Langshaw 2009-06-06. Guinness announces gaming world records. Digital Spy Limited. Archived from the original on 2009-09-01. Retrieved on 2018-03-06.
- ^ WoW Up to 7.4 Million Subscribers. Retrieved on 2014-10-14.
- ^ WORLD OF WARCRAFT® SURPASSES 10 MILLION SUBSCRIBERS AS WARLORDS OF DRAENOR™ LAUNCH BEGINS. Retrieved on 2014-11-19.
- ^ WoW Down to 7.1 Million Subscribers. Retrieved on 2015-05-06.
- ^ Activision No Longer Has To Fear Declining 'World of Warcraft' Subscriptions. Forbes (2015-11-03). Archived from the original on 2015-11-03. Retrieved on 2018-03-06.
- ^ Blizzard reaches 100M lifetime World of Warcraft accounts. Polygon (2014-01-28). Archived from the original on 2014-02-01. Retrieved on 2018-03-06.
- ^ World of Warcraft: Azeroth by the Numbers. Blizzard Entertainment (2014-01-28).
- ^ Blizzard Will No Longer Report World of Warcraft Subscriber Numbers
- ^ Mike Morhaime, Phoenix995. 2008-10-11. Blizzcon 2008 Interview Mike Morhaime. Youtube. Retrieved 2008-11-30.
- ^ 2018, Blizzard’s Project Nomad was partially eaten by StarCraft. PC Gamer, accessed on 2018-10-08
- ^ a b 2012-11-01, Author: Blizzard's Nomad gave way to World of Warcraft. Game Shack, retrieved on 2013-05-29
- ^ a b 2012-11-01, Community Spotlight: The man behind the book of Blizzard. Shack News, retrieved on 2018-10-08
- ^ Web Archive - Fusion NET: Blizzard Entertainment Announces World of Warcraft.
- ^ a b 2018-05-09, ‘WOW’ Devs On Project Titan, South Park & Accidentally Making an MMO Phenomenon. Wikia, retrieved on 2018-05-13
- ^ a b Phillip Kolar. The Three Lives of Blizzard Entertainment. Polygon. Retrieved on 2014-10-04.
- ^ 2018-05-16, Jeff Kaplan of Blizzard Entertainment. AIAS, retrieved on 2018-06-21
- ^ 2015-05-27, BlizzCon 2014 – Overwatch Origins Panel Transcript. Blizzplanet, retrieved on 2015-05-28
- ^ 2017-11-05, BEHIND BLIZZARD’S WORLDS PANEL. Blizzpro, retrieved on 2017-11-19
- ^ Game Informer #308: Reforging Real-time Strategy, pg. 57
- ^ 2019-06-28, Diablo 2 Legacy Recounted by Stay Awhile and Listen Author. Diablo.net, retrieved on 2019-07-03
- ^ 2017-09-22, OVERWATCH: FROM CANCELLED PROJECT TO GAME OF THE YEAR - IGN EXPERT MODE EP. 3. IGN, retrieved on 2017-09-23
- ^ Blizzard on Revitalising World of Warcraft.
- ^ 2015-05-27, BlizzCon 2014 – Overwatch Origins Panel Transcript. Blizzplanet, retrieved on 2015-05-30
- ^ BlizzCon Q&A Additional Questions. Blizzard Entertainment (2018-11-16). Archived from the original on 2018-11-17. Retrieved on 2018-11-23.
- ^ Colin Campbell 2014-10-30. Blizzard is planning on World of Warcraft still being around in 2024. Polygon. Retrieved on 2014-10-30.
- ^ Blizzard Talks World of Warcraft Legacy Servers And More (2016-06-10).
- ^ 2014-08-11, Blizzard Has Considered WoW 2 -- What Would You Like to See?. Gamespot, retrieved on 2014-08-16
- ^ 2015-08-13, GAMESCOM 2015: BLIZZARD ON THE POSSIBILITY OF WORLD OF WARCRAFT 2. IGN, retrieved on 2015-08-14
External links
- Blizzard Entertainment World of Warcraft original page [dead link - archived copy]
- Blizzard Entertainment World of Warcraft updated original page [dead link - archived copy]
- Blizzard Entertainment World of Warcraft current page
- World of Warcraft Community Site Official World of Warcraft website (US)
- World of Warcraft Europe Official World of Warcraft website (EU)
- Wikipedia World of Warcraft
- winehq.com The Official WineHQ website with info about World of Warcraft 4.2.x running with Wine.
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