Search Results For: Battle For Azeroth
How did patch 9.1.5 treat you?
It's now past Wednesday, my friends, which means that World of Warcraft's patch 9.1.5 is out in the whole world -- and it's time to talk about it.
When is Legion Timewalking? You’ll have to wait until early December
World of Warcraft Shadowlands patch 9.1.5 is now live, and with it will come Legion Timewalking and the return of the Mage Tower for two weeks starting on December 7th, but the Mage Tower gets an additional two weeks on top of that, and will close with maintenance in the first week of January.
Everything we know about WoW patch 9.1.5
Shadowlands patch 9.1.5 is now live and with it comes a lot of quality of life improvements.
Island Expeditions to be soloable in patch 9.1.5, so you can finally collect the mounts, pets, and transmog you’ve been looking for
Yes, that's right -- in patch 9.1.5 you'll be able to solo queue for Island Expeditions, so you'll be able to run Expeditions by yourself or with up to two friends rather than having to wait for others to queue up.
Could cross-faction raiding and alt-friendly expansions be in the cards for WoW’s future?
In these tumultuous times, what does the future of World of Warcraft look like?
How often should you have to relearn your class?
Generally speaking, World of Warcraft saves its most class-altering changes for the patches that introduce the systems for the next expansion -- changes like the loss of Armor Penetration, or the introduction of Holy Power, or the removal of Stances from Warriors.
When is the patch 9.1.5 release date? November 2!
We originally predicted that patch 9.1.5 would launch in early October, but we finally know that the patch 9.1.5 release date is November 2 — just over a week from now.
How should Blizzard implement the lessons of Torghast for future soloable content?
I mean, not just Torghast -- I feel like the return of Legion's Mage Tower in patch 9.1.5 and the Horrific Visions from Battle for Azeroth should also have taught them a few things -- but I'm definitely curious what you guys think the Torghast (and to a lesser extent, the Maw and Korthia) experience should teach Blizzard about making soloable content for players.
How would you feel about a World of Warcraft expansion without a classic Big Bad to defeat?
I mean, we had N'Zoth in Battle for Azeroth, the Burning Legion and Sargeras in Legion, Gul'dan and the Legion in Warlords of Draenor... at this point, it feels to me like maybe we need a departure of some kind from the experiences we have been having in our WoW expansions.
What if World of Warcraft kept factions but made them not be our problem?
During the Lore Watch podcast recording this week Joe Perez and I got to talking about the factions due to an email question.