Thumbs Up: World of Warcraft

 
 
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Total Posts: 64
Joined  2003-07-29

Sure, MMOs might be a dime a dozen. Sure, WoW is a big investment ($50, $15/mo, plus potential upgrades needed on computer or peripherals such as 2+ button mouse).

But, you know what? I don’t care. Blizzard has taken a look at every MMORPG currently on the market and said, “We could do better.” And they have. They’ve taken good features from other MMOs and given them that Blizzard flare. You can argue that there are only two or three different types of quests (fetch/rescue, kill, and, uh… deliver a message/item), but that doesn’t detract from the beauty of World of Warcraft (W0W).

WoW’s stylized graphics are superb. Even the best video cards can’t run WoW on the Mac with every video option all the way up. Well, to be more specific - you can’t turn all of them all the way up and expect frame rates high enough to make the game playable.

WoW’s play control is simple, but expandable. Almost every thing can be mapped to a key or mouse button allowing for less hunt-and-peck play within the UI. The varying methods of communicating with other players are well executed and the way you can communicate weapon/item specs by shift-clicking them from your inventory while a text input field is open is very nice. The social side of WoW is also well done, with guilds, party options, raid options, and things like Players versus Player combat and diuels.

The UI is slick and elegant in WoW. The toolbars don’t take up too much space and are easy to navigate. The icons are usually intuitive and very easy to remember. Plus, with one-key keyboard shortcuts available for pretty much all of the common commands, you can access controls even faster (pressing M to bring up the map, rather than clicking on the globe icon, for example). The UI is also customizable to some extent, and many mods for the game exist providing changes to the interface and even, so far as I know without having used any, to the gameplay.

There are three different server types to play WoW on. Normal (Player vs Environment, or PvE), Player vs Players (PvP), and Role Play (RP). Perosnally, I’ll stick with Normal or RP to avoid the petty, annoying children playing on PvP servers. I really don’t appreciate starting a brand new character only to constantly pestered by level 60 characters from an opposing force taunting me with chicken noises and repeatedly challenging me to duels I clearly can not win. That’s a childish way to play the game and it’s not worth spending $15 a month on a game just to harass people. Then again, since most of the people doing that are probably under the age of 16, they’re probably not paying for their service.

The character creation system in WoW is a lot of fun. There are jsut enough options that I rarely ever see characters that look the same. As you progress and find new weapons and armor, mixing and matching styles, everyone looks pretty unique.

I’ve made a number of friends in the nearly one-month long time I’ve been playing WoW and on the non-PvP servers I rarely encounter anyone I might feel compelled to call an a-hole (changing that - to ss).

One of the nice feature of WoW is that you don’t have to throw away your life you enjoy it. By not playing, you can build rest time so that the next time you play, monsters give you twice as much experience, giving you a chance to catch up. If you’re like me, you can only play once a week (part of my excuse is not having a computer capable of playing the game, so I go to my use my dad’s at my parents’ house), so this feature doesn’t balance out quite like it should.

I’ve invested about 2 whole days of my life into the game so far experimenting with 5 different characters (two on PvP, one on RP) and have thoroughly enjoyed every moment. I enjoy simple things. Or cute things, which is why I’m a sucker for Pokémon. That said, I will gladly spend two hours fishing in WoW or stop in the middle of a quest to mix some herbs into potions or create bandages out of linen. The skills and professions add a lot to the experience of the game. Finding items that other people can utilize with their professions allows you a chance to make some extra money, or gives you something to try and trade in order to get items you need for your professions. There are just enough professions that if you can maintain a steady group of friends to play with, or four of five-man group can compliment eachother so very well.

This, clearly, is not the best review you’ll read, but I’m not the best writer. Regardless, I apologize and hope that if you were interested in any way in playing WoW, that this might just sway you to do it. Maybe I’d see you on…

Note, however, that WoW, like many games, is not for everyone. Some people only like sports games, some only like racing games, some only like fighting games, FPSs, or console RPGs like Final Fantasy. Me? I like good games, and WoW is one of them.

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Joined  2005-09-12

What server are you on?  I’ve got a 34 warrior on Greymane.

I’ve experienced some days where WoW just holds no appeal for me, in which case I just go out and do something.  This stems from having to do the Gnomeregan dungeon (a terrible, boring dungeon) and just getting the impression that there wasn’t much variety to the game.  But everyone says that lvl 30-40 are the hardest to play simply because it gets a little boring.  But I’m back at it and hope to have a mount soon!

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Yeah, 30-40 seems to be some sort of ungodly boring middle ground between the thrill of getting started and become practically godlike and doings the best raids and instances in the game.

I have five characters (gasp!). One is Daenaudril on Lothar (a night elf Druid). She’s level 17. Then there’s Brebinn (gnome Mage, level 14), on Perenolde. Zaknafane (troll Hunter, level 5) on Spirestone. Loakee (dwarf Priest, level 9) on Ner’Zhul. And, finally, Hlongedath (troll Shaman, level 1) on Argent Dawn.

Hlongedath is, obviously, the newest. Some friends and I are planning on playing on Argent Dawn, an RP server, on Friday nights. We won’t play unless all of us are on at once adventuring as a group.

Daenaudril is my favorite character, so she kind of gets favoritism as far as time spent playing. Currently, I only play on Fridays, but I pretty much play from 2pm to 12:30am PST.

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Joined  2005-09-12

I haven’t had a chance to play with WoW yet (still waiting for ADSL to be put into the new housing estate we live in) but I was wondering if any of you had previously played Lineage?

I realise the graphics are on a completely different level but how does the actual experience and community compare?

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Joined  2005-09-15

I have played Wow since the open beta and have a 56 NE hunter, a 24 mage and a 10 priest.

Definatley check this game out. I was about to quit playing and all of a sudden i gained interest in it again.  Sometimes the quest and gameplay can get boring though. It is a beautiful game to look at as well.

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Joined  2005-09-16

GReat Game, I have a lvl 34 druid. Its slow sometimes but the group play is great Love it

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Joined  2005-09-13

waa, what kind of Mac do u play WoW on?

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DP 2.7GHz G5 PowerMac. 2.5GB RAM. Stock hard drive (250GB?). ATI Radeon 9650 (256MB).

The graphics card is really not that great. Oh, sure, it gets the job done, but something like an X800, X850, or Nvidia GeForce 6800 series card would be a lot better for games performance. The processor and RAM are way more than enough.

I think the Mac client of WoW could stand a few more tweaks, but more importantly, Apple could stand to use PCI Express for the graphics cards/chip sets because AGP is just no good these days for gaming. Seriously - the same card in a Mac is not only hindered by bad drivers (partly Apple’s fault, if not entirely so), but also from slow connections. Take the Radeon 9650 and put it in a PCI Express 16x slot and it’d be probably run better. Maybe not a lot better… But butter.

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Joined  2005-09-26

I’ve been playing since day one and I still enjoy it. I run it on an AMD box and a G5 iMac. The mac client was lacking in the beginning but they have done a decent job of fixing most of the issues.

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has anyone tried the game on a recent iBook? i know the requirements aren’t too demanding,but i’d like to know if it can play on my 1.2ghz iBook. thanks grin

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Joined  2005-06-03

A show of hands please, how many of us are addicted to WoW? It’s not as bad as EverCrack but give it time. . .

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Triadone, the iBooks only have 32MB of video/grapbics memory, right? With all the settings really low (or all the way down), it’ll probably run fine. Keep in mind, people are figuring out ways to play WoW on high-end G3s!

James R. Stoup, it’s bad. Really bad. I fiend for it all the time. Fortunately, or maybe this is worse, I can only play once a week. Occassionaly I can squeeze in a couple of hours on a second day. But… On that one day each week, I play for hours and hours and hours. Once I can finally afford to get myself a new computer, this will change and I’ll probably play an hour almost every day, and then clock in many hours on Fridays. Saturdays and Sundays would have to be my break unless my usual weekend plans fall through.

Current “new computer fund goal:” >$3000 (intend to get high-end PowerMac, nice display, extra RAM, better video card, etc)
Amount currently saved: $1

Yes!

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Waa,

I have a friend who plays WoW on a nice 23” aluminum display which complements his G5 PowerMac nicely.  He too is an addict.  Good luck weaning yourself off.  Remember, if you die at your computer like the guy in Korea someone else gets your machine.

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Waa - Sep 29, 2005 12:59pm

Triadone, the iBooks only have 32MB of video/grapbics memory, right? With all the settings really low (or all the way down), it’ll probably run fine. Keep in mind, people are figuring out ways to play WoW on high-end G3s!

James R. Stoup, it’s bad. Really bad. I fiend for it all the time. Fortunately, or maybe this is worse, I can only play once a week. Occassionaly I can squeeze in a couple of hours on a second day. But… On that one day each week, I play for hours and hours and hours. Once I can finally afford to get myself a new computer, this will change and I’ll probably play an hour almost every day, and then clock in many hours on Fridays. Saturdays and Sundays would have to be my break unless my usual weekend plans fall through.

Current “new computer fund goal:” >$3000 (intend to get high-end PowerMac, nice display, extra RAM, better video card, etc)
Amount currently saved: $1

Yes!

lol, hey,maybe u’ll have the $ by the time the mactels are out. here’s to hoping the x86 move will give macs a gaming kick in the pants! grin

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What are the best settings for WOW my system is G5 dp 1.8ghz 8gig ram nvidia 6800 ddl gt 256vram . 500gig maxtor hd

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Waa - Sep 11, 2005 03:04pm

WoW’s stylized graphics are superb. Even the best video cards can’t run WoW on the Mac with every video option all the way up. Well, to be more specific - you can’t turn all of them all the way up and expect frame rates high enough to make the game playable.

Actually, I can turn all the options all the way up and stay above 60 FPS while on a wind rider, but I usually have some unnoticeable options lowered and stay above 90 FPS. I’m using a white 20” Intel iMac.