Warcraft wows fans
Kenneth England
Issue date: 1/24/07 Section: Entertainment
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Adding to the brilliance of the game is the much-anticipated expansion, "The Burning Crusade." Originally slated to be released last November, developer Blizzard held off on releasing the add-on to tweak and fine-tune the product. It was released on Jan. 16 and the delay paid off.
For those not familiar with the concept, WoW is a Massive Multiplayer Online role-playing game (often called simply MMO) that allows gamers to create characters on a permanent online world and interact with millions of other people in the game. An MMO represents a virtual life where everything you do is continued into the next day for as long as you keep your account.
"The Burning Crusade" expands the WoW game world in many ways, but the primary change is the raising of the level cap from 60 to 70, allowing characters to become more skilled and powerful. Players will find that leveling from 60 to 70 will take roughly the same time it took them to level from 1 to 60. Which, if you skip sleep and responsibilities, will take a minimum of four days.
Another reward is the two new playable races: Blood Elves for the Horde and Draenei for the Alliance. The new profession of Jewelcrafting and an immense amount of new items, skills, reputations and rewards to acquire have been added.
Stylistically, "The Burning Crusade" is a marvel. The art design, which has always been a highlight of the game, has been taken to new heights in the expansion. The new areas that Outland (a new land for high level characters) introduces are gorgeous. From the desert scenes of Hellfire Peninsula to the mushroom forests of Zangermarsh, these locales breathe with a sense of the fantastic and do an amazing job of immersing the player into the environment.
Dungeons are similarly well designed. They are much smaller and quicker to complete than the original dungeons in the game, in an effort to cater to casual WoW gamers. Character and creature animations with more lifelike and dynamic zones, create a much more realistic sense of a living, breathing world than the original game did.
2008 Woodie Awards

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