Warlords of Draenor: On the Outside Looking In

I find myself in an interesting position just now. For the first time since I started playing, I am missing out on the launch of a new World of Warcraft expansion, having cancelled my subscription shortly before the release of Warlords of Draenor. I don’t intend this to be a permanent departure; I just didn’t feel right paying 25% more for an expansion that seems to remove as much as it adds. I’ll be back once the price drops and/or Blizzard shifts their designs back to something more palatable.

A wallpaper for World of Warcraft: Warlords of DraenorBut like a heartsick man lurking on his ex’s Facebook page, I am maintaining a close eye on the Warcraft community to see how WoD is being received. It is somewhat interesting to be seeing the expansion entirely through the eyes of others.

It is of course difficult to get an accurate picture this way. There is the temptation to declare the reception of WoD to be overwhelmingly negative, but it is important to remember that discussions online always have a negative bent, because those who are happy are busy playing rather than posting on forums.

I also have a certain bias, because I go into this expansion with a very low opinion of it. I am not happy with the decisions Blizzard has made in regards to Warlords of Draenor, either in terms of lore or gameplay. So naturally I’m biased to seek out opinions that align with my own, negative, view.

With those caveats out of the way, I now present to you my views on WoD so far, based entirely on secondhand reports.

Launch and the population spike:

It’s hard to say whether the launch of WoD is more good news or bad news for Blizzard. On the one hand, it was a trainwreck of epic proportions, by all reports. On the other hand, part of that is because so many people have returned to the game for the launch. Last reports have WoW back at ten million subscribers, numbers not seen since the launch of Mists of Pandaria.

A screenshot of Telador in World of Warcraft: Warlords of DraenorBoth haters and fans are eager to use these events to justify their personal narratives, but for my part, I think both are over-blowing things.

I do think it’s embarrassing that a company as successful and as experienced as Blizzard is still having problems like this. They can and should do better.

With that said, though, launches are always going to be somewhat ugly, and it’s all fairly irrelevant in the greater scheme of things. The quality of the expansion is far more important than the quality of its launch.

Conversely, I also think the surge in population is largely meaningless in the greater scheme of things. A WoW expansion always triggers a large surge of population, but if history is any guide, those gains will be very short-lived. Mists also saw a big jump in population at launch, but it didn’t take long for those numbers to crash and crash hard.

World of Warcraft is a game a lot of people have a lot of nostalgia for, and when a new expansion launches, it gets people curious to check out the old flame. Most will then leave once again when they realize WoW is still WoW. It’s unlikely Blizzard will ever overhaul the game enough to win back a significant quantity of those who have decided WoW is no longer for them, and I certainly don’t think Warlords of Draenor is the expansion to do that.

Flying:

My monk flying over the Krasarang WildsPerhaps not surprisingly, the inability to use flying mounts on Draenor remains the expansion’s greatest controversy. It’s been over a year since the announcement was made, and discussions of it are still cropping up constantly.

And opinions on the matter seem surprisingly uniform. Every post in favour of restoring flight — and there are a lot of them — is inundated with “likes” and posts of support, and every post in favour of the status quo is buried with downvotes and dissenting opinions.

This is probably as close to unanimous opinion as I have ever seen in the Warcraft community. Even Pandaria’s dailies — which are now widely acknowledged to have been a mistake — had much more and more vocal fans than a world without flying does.

This comes as no surprise. Many people, myself included, have argued that turning off flight after making it a mainstay of the game for the majority of its lifespan will do no good at all. It’s only common sense.

Yet Blizzard ignored all feedback on the matter, just as they did when those of us in the Mists beta overwhelmingly argued against the daily grind. “You’ll like it once you try it,” they said, blithely ignoring the fact that we have all tried it every time we level a new alt. Now people are living it live, and despite Blizzard’s words to the contrary, opinions have not changed.

A screenshot of Gorgrond in World of Warcraft: Warlords of DraenorI maintain what I have said from the beginning: This will come to be remembered as the greatest blunder of Warlords of Draenor. Flying will return, and this experiment will not be repeated again, though they might come up with another equally whacky way to try to fix something that was never broken.

Size does matter:

Something else which is a matter of some controversy is whether there’s enough to do in WoD. Certainly as an outsider it appears to me to be far smaller and less ambitious than previous expansions, and I have seen many people complain they’re already running out of things to do.

It’s hard to say whether these criticisms are valid are not, because bored WoW players are like depressed teenagers. That’s kind of their nature. If you’re on a WoW forum and no one says they’ve run out of things to do, you’re not on a WoW forum.

However, there are some elements of these discussions I find telling.

What makes me think there might be something to the idea that WoD is a lacking expansion is not the arguments made for that notion, but those against it. I’ve seen people rattle off very long lists of the innumerable activities there are in Warlords of Draenor… but at least half the things mentioned tend to be things you see in every expansion (gee, raids, that’s new and exciting), some even count the content of previous expansions, and often garrisons get counted multiple times in such lists.

You can level your buildings, and you can level followers, but those are both just parts of managing your garrison. Listing those as separate activities seems to me a bit like listing killing trash and killing bosses as separate things, when they’re both just parts of running dungeons. It certainly doesn’t counter the prevailing perception that WoD has little to offer beyond garrisons.

A screenshot of Shadowmoon Valley in World of Warcraft: Warlords of DraenorThe extent to which facts need to be twisted to show WoD as having a bounty of content does not inspire confidence.

The anniversary:

The one thing I regretted about choosing to be a late adopter for WoD was missing out on the tenth anniversary celebration. Having read reactions to it, that regret has faded.

The Raid Finder revamp of Molten Core has not been well-received. It has been plagued by game-breaking bugs, and is reported to be extremely over-tuned, to the point where groups are wiping on trash and taking hours to complete it. To add insult to injury, only the final boss drops loot of any kind, making it a long slog for little reward.

Now, the anniversary version of the raid is going to be around for several weeks, and as people gear up, it will get vastly easier. It’s still very early in the expansion, and no one’s geared yet.

But I wonder why that has to be an issue. This is an anniversary celebration; it’s supposed to be a present to the players. Why does it need to present any challenge at all?

Once again, I feel The Secret World has the right idea. That’s a game that’s not at all afraid to challenge its players, sometimes brutally, but when it comes to event bosses, they make them straight up loot pinatas where failure is downright impossible. It’s a nice way to reward players, and give them a break from the more difficult content.

It's raining men!Conclusions:

Even calling these “conclusions” is probably a little disingenuous, since I won’t be able to form any really strong opinions of the expansion until I play it. I’m not sure if all the negativity I’m seeing is indicative of an overall failed expansion, or just a combination of the usual cantankerousness of the gaming community mixed with my own bias.

And to be fair, I’ve seen plenty of people expressing a lot of love for this expansion, but at the same time, a lot of them seem the type to just love anything Blizzard puts out because they’re that into WoW. That is not at all a criticism of them; indeed, I envy their ability to simply enjoy the game.

But let’s put it this way: I’ve yet to see anyone articulate a reason for why WoD is better than anything that came before it.

One thing does seem clear to me: Warlords of Draenor is not setting the world on fire. While I’m not sure it has been worse received than past expansions, it certainly doesn’t seem to be any better received. Going in, many seemed to think WoD would herald a renaissance for WoW, and I really don’t think that’s going to be the case.

The only evidence to back such an idea is the surge in population, but that will only mean something if those gains can be maintained for more than a few months.

A player garrison in World of Warcraft: Warlords of DraenorFor the most part, it seems as though WoD is just another WoW expansion, with little to distinguish it from its forebears. Whether that’s a compliment or a criticism depends on personal perspective, but I don’t think it’s going to do much in the long to halt WoW’s slow decline, and I think those expecting the second coming of MMO Jesus are destined for disappointment.

Blizzard Trademarks “Eye of Azshara”?

Here we go again.

So it beginsAccording to a post on MMO-Champion, Blizzard has trademarked the title, “Eye of Azshara.”

Now, there is an excellent chance this is a hoax. After the “Dark Below” fiasco,* I’m not going to jump to any conclusions. There is some evidence it may be legit — as far as anyone can tell, someone had to spend a few hundred Euros to register this, which is a lot for a hoax — and the fact that Blizzcon is only a few days away is also suspicious. But I do think there is at least a 50/50 chance this is a hoax.

*(It is however interesting to note that The Dark Below may not have been a hoax after all, though it definitely wasn’t related to World of Warcraft. The first expansion for Activision’s Destiny is called “The Dark Below.” It seems very strange to me that Blizzard would file the first trademark application for a game published by their affiliate, but it’s also hard to believe these two things are totally unrelated.)

But speculation is fun, so for the sake of argument, let’s think about what this could mean.

I desperately want this to be a WoW expansion, or maybe even Warcraft IV.

Azshara is by far the expansion concept that most excites me. Azshara is perhaps the last great Warcraft villain left undefeated by players, barring godlike beings such as Sargeras that really aren’t suited to be raid bosses.

Art of Queen Azshara from the Warcraft trading card gameShe is one of the most powerful individuals in Warcraft lore — a mage of incalculable power and skill who has also been empowered by the Old Gods and may now control the elemental of water. She is also one of the most selfish, twisted, and cruel individuals in the Warcraft universe.

An expansion featuring Azshara as the main villain and the Great Sea as its setting could bring in all sorts of long-overlooked locations and ideas in Warcraft lore. We could finally go to Kul Tiras. We could visit the Tomb of Sargeras. We could journey to Zandalar and have our long-overdue reckoning with Zul. We could come face-to-face with N’Zoth, the Drowned God. Want to visit the Emerald Dream? This would be the ideal time to do it.

Furthermore, Blizzard has been foreshadowing something terrible brewing in Azeroth’s oceans since Warcraft III. That’s how we wound up with Murlocs; something drove them from the depths. And they’ve been dropping more hints ever since.

I think an expansion based on Azshara would be the first and perhaps only expansion to rival Wrath of the Lich King in its epic grandeur and significance to the ongoing Warcraft story.

It’d also be a great chance to finally give Tyrande the attention she deserves. As Azshara’s most obvious rival, Tyrande is the ideal choice to be the protagonist of such an expansion. Although knowing how Blizzard is going lately they’d probably make her play second fiddle to Malfurion or resurrected Illidan or maybe just make the protagonist someone else completely random for no reason, like Velen.

Art of Tyrande Whisperwind from the World of Warcraft trading card gameAll that said, I think the odds of this being a WoW expansion are very low. A lot of people are guessing they’ll announce the next expansion at this year’s BlizzCon, but as I’ve said before, I think that’s very improbable.

Yes, Blizzard keeps going on about how they want to do yearly expansions. But they’ve been saying that since Wrath, and the wait between expansions has actually been getting longer.

Even if they were far enough along to have something to show from 7.0, it would be a monumentally foolish PR move to unveil it before Warlords of Draenor is even released, thus stealing their own thunder.

The odds of Eye of Azshara being a new Warcraft RTS are even more abysmal. Blizzard’s RTS team is already splitting its attention between StarCraft II and Heroes of the Storm, and I don’t think we’ll see another Warcraft RTS while WoW is around, much as it pains me to say that.

One intriguing — though, again, highly improbable — possibility that I haven’t seen mentioned is that Eye of Azshara might be a new expansion for Warcraft III.

Sounds crazy — and it probably is — but it’s not entirely outside the bounds of possibility. There’s a lot of talk of an HD re-release of WC3, and it’s concievable that Blizzard might want to sweeten the pot by including some new content. A short new campaign set around the time of the Frozen Throne — either a prequel dealing with how the Naga joined Illidan or a sequel dealing with the aftermath of their defeat in Northrend — probably wouldn’t tax the RTS team too badly.

Interesting to think about, but again, it doesn’t seem likely.

If Eye of Azshara isn’t a hoax, I think it’s probably a Hearthstone expansion.

A game of HearthstoneWe know Blizzard is working on a big Hearthstone expansion, and there’s a pretty good chance they’d announce it at this year’s BlizzCon. Now would be the right time to trademark its title. So it makes sense.

So I think Eye of Azshara is probably a hoax, but there’s also a fairly strong chance it’s a Hearthstone expansion. It could be related to WoW — I hope it is, and I won’t rule it out — but it seems improbable.

* * *

It’s also worth noting that the same post on MMO-Champion mentions that “Overwatch” has continued to proliferate across trademark databases, so there’s a good chance that’s legit. I have no further thoughts on the matter beyond what I’ve already said, though.