Tag Archive: Blizzard


The wind of change is blowing through the World of Warcraft. Whether we like it or not, PvP’s focus in the expansion will shift from arenas to the battlegrounds. Blizzard has announced that they’ll be shipping Cataclysm with at least one new battleground, the Battle for Gilneas City, and the promise of much more throughout the course of the expansion. MMO-Champion’s datamined screenshots from the alpha — before Blizzard ordered everything taken offline — revealed a zone speculated to be a battleground, situated in the Twilight Highlands where the Dragonmaw clan of orcs and the Wildhammer clan of dwarves are locked in deadly combat. From all indications, this battleground will be ready by the time Cataclysm ships. That’s exciting and is indicative of Blizzard’s commitment to the new directive. Maybe we’ll even see more than two battlegrounds on ship.

On top of that, wouldn’t it be fantastic if the old-school battlegrounds such as Warsong Gulch, Arathi Basin and Alterac Valley got some cosmetic changes to reflect the geographical upheaval that Deathwing wreaks upon Azeroth? It only makes sense, after all. Blizzard wouldn’t need to adjust gameplay mechanics, just reshape the landscape a little bit. It would go a long way towards making the old battlegrounds feel new again and could even provide an opportunity for Blizzard to make Alterac Valley slightly more symmetrical. Charred earth, dilapidated structures — these should serve to remind players that it’s a broken world out there instead of feeling a blast from the past every time they zone in. Blizzard has gone all-out for Cataclysm and has confirmed that old instances will be getting some tweaks, so while I’m not holding my breath, it just might happen.

As much as the change seems to favor the casual player, the truth is that the battlegrounds can potentially become a very hostile environment for them. While Blizzard has mentioned that the best PvP gear can be obtained without ever stepping into the arenas, it should be pointed out that players need to perform well in rated battlegrounds in order to do so. Rated battlegrounds, or RBGs as people are calling them, will be an extremely different environment from the casual PUG battlegrounds most players are accustomed to. They will be harsh. In fact, for most players who’d never set foot in the competitive environment of arenas, they’ll make their world spin.

Some players have already gotten a taste of this in the form of premade groups going against PUGs — often with the aid of the Preform AV Enabler addon. In the battlegrounds, an opposing team comprised mostly if not completely of players from one realm almost always indicates a premade and almost always results in an ugly loss for the rag-tag team. The best premades demolish PUGs who operate with no clear direction or leadership, and although matches are over pretty quickly, it can be very demoralizing for opponents who typically don’t expect such competition.

When Cataclysm hits, premades will be commonplace, even in unrated Battlegrounds. Teams will use the unrated battlegrounds to practice or grind honor points in a fast and efficient fashion. To the casual player, this can be a ruinous experience, especially to those trying out the battlegrounds for the first time. Although matchmaking systems are in place to ensure that premades encounter other premades, it’s easy enough to game the system by coordinating queues over Vent or even automate the process through an addon. Blizzard doesn’t normally allow that sort of thing, but there have been ways to circumvent that.

Players need to be prepared for this. The battlegrounds are going to change in a big way, and competition will elevate considerably compared to relatively relaxed pace of today. This can potentially make the environment inhospitable to casual players who take to the battlegrounds to unwind and might not be conducive to those who queue solo. Even those who have experience in premades will have to ramp up their games, since most premades today actually avoid any real competition by going up against PUGs. Premade vs. premade battles last considerably longer and are counterproductive to the honor grind. Rated battlegrounds will be a completely different experience altogether.

While battlegrounds will allow for greater flexibility in group composition than arenas, some classes and specs will be desired for abilities that work in the battleground environment. Blizzard is giving everyone new and exciting abilities in Cataclysm, some of which seem designed specifically with battlegrounds play in mind. As I’d mentioned in a previous column, some classes will seem like perfect fits in certain situations — for example, druids will be even more desirable in Warsong Gulch because of Stampeding Roar, an ability that gives the druid and his allies a 40% increase in movement speed for eight seconds.

Blizzard described the mage’s Wall of Fog ability in such a way that hinted at their vision for Cataclysm, mentioning how the ability could be used to protect flags in a battleground. The rogue ability Smoke Bomb also has obvious PvP applications. Clearly, the developers are designing with competitive battleground play in mind — they have a chance to redesign the PvP game from the ground up now instead of retrofitting it the way arenas were shoehorned into the game during Burning Crusade. This time around, Blizzard is designing class abilities while considering the PvP environment instead of merely having several PvE abilities that also happen to have PvP applications.

It will be exciting to see the entire list of abilities and talents that classes will be getting in the expansion and the strategies that arise from them. This is another reason why the battlegrounds will become extremely different come Cataclysm — for the first time in the history of the game, I think, the developers are designing class abilities for the battlegrounds in much the same way they design raid encounters with specific class synergies in mind. Players will be utilizing abilities that affect large-scale PvP in ways like never before. The closest thing we have to those new abilities are AoE damage spells or Bloodlust/Heroism. While arena teams timed their use of Bloodlust/Heroism, these new abilities also require positional consideration. It’s huge. It’s exciting.

When Cataclysm rolls around, we’ll need to rethink our way of approaching battlegrounds PvP. Because the changes are so overwhelming, this is true for the rest of the game as well, but the difference here is that for once, PvP and the battlegrounds aren’t an afterthought. They’re baked into the whole thing from the very beginning. Blizzard wants us to use Wall of Fog in Arathi Basin. They want us to huddle and rush with the flag in Warsong Gulch under the effects of a Stampeding Roar. They want us to field our rogues and obscure key objectives with Smoke Bombs. They want us to have fun with all these new toys they’ve designed for use in large-scale PvP, and man, we’ve only glimpsed a few of them.

Not only that, Blizzard appears committed to designing a lot of new battlegrounds, as well. They’ve taken some great ideas from other battleground-centric MMOs and applied them to the game over the course of Wrath, such as the ability to queue from anywhere and leveling in the battlegrounds. Maybe there’s a chance we’ll see additional maps using the same mechanics as other battlegrounds just to spice things up. It doesn’t have to be a completely new battleground with new rule sets every time.

Pretty much everything about Cataclysm is reason to be excited … Blizzard is remaking the world, and everything will feel new again. They had an opportunity to essentially reboot the game, and this time around, battlegrounds are part of the plan — not just adjunct to the game but as a core part of the experience. You can still opt to avoid PvP entirely, of course, but given the richness of the battleground content in the expansion, you’d be missing out on a whole lot. I always say that anytime is a good time to start hitting the battlegrounds, but I think I’m revising that statement. Cataclysm will be the best damn time to enjoy battleground PvP.

My not-so-gentle Spiritual Guidance readers, I have a confession to make. I’m filled with hate.

I hate cats. I hate Hummel figurines. I hate trifling gnome Wilfred Fizzlebang. I hate the taste of whatever brand ketchup they use at McDonalds. Lots and lots of hate. Oh, if only there were a way to channel this magnificent … shadowy hatepower.

Ask and ye shall receive, my brethren! Not from me, mind you — from Blizzard. (I mostly just give out shadow priesting knowledge with the occasional nod to pop culture.) This week, Spiritual Guidance is tackling the changes to the shadow priest spec that currently exist within the Cataclysm alpha. If you’re adamant on being surprised and don’t want anything spoiled, I recommend you stop reading now and instead invest your time in the following YouTube video. I feel it provides a respectable alternative.

But if you want to take your loathing for the formulaic CBS sitcom Two and a Half Men and channel it into a spiritual agent of death, and you just can’t wait until later this year to find out how … follow me past the break.

A ghostly aspect of our shadowy hatepower

For all the bitching and moaning that we do sometimes, shadow priest damage is actually pretty respectable right now. I definitely want that damage-dealing ability to keep pace in Cataclysm. But besides that, the main thing I want is a new ability or talent that makes me sit up and take notice. We don’t know if it’ll last through past the alpha or beta stages, but I think we finally have one: Shadowy Apparition. It takes the place of Misery on our talent tree.

Shadowy Apparition

While moving or dealing damage with Shadow Word: Pain, you will sometimes summon a Shadow version of yourself which will slowly move towards a target which is afflicted by your Shadow Word: Pain. Once reaching that target, it will instantly deal damage equal to 15/30/45% of your Mind Blasts’ damage.

Commenter Hollow Leviathan describes the talent as “a ghostly aspect of your shadowy hatepower” that “consume(s) the life energy of your opponents.” In other words: awesome.

Aside from the visual appeal, the talent would insert a few new variables into the game for shadow priests. First, it appears that the damage we do would now be (at least slightly) contingent on how far we are from our target. This is something new for us — our current spells don’t require travel time the way a shaman’s Lightning Bolt does, for example.

Also interesting is the “while moving” part of the tooltip. How movement will factor into the talent, I’m not so sure, but if it provides a net benefit on a movement-heavy fight, I’m all for it. It also puts a little bit more power and interest behind Shadow Word: Pain, which became a somewhat forgettable and weak background DoT in Wrath.

I wasn’t entirely thrilled that Misery was being removed from the Shadow tree, but they exceeded expectations with this one. I hope it makes it to the live servers. Even if it’s not some kind of massive damage meter-breaking ability, it’d be nice to have another Fox Van Allen around the house, even if he doesn’t do much aside from blowing people up.

The ever-changing hit rating and hope for the off-spec

We already know that major changes are coming to hit ratings in Cataclysm. In March, we learned about Blizzard’s plans to let shaman convert spirit to hit as a deep-tree talent. This past week we learned that, if the new tooltip for Twisted Faith is any indication, shadow priests are getting the same treatment.

Twisted Faith

Increases your spell power by 20% of your total Spirit, and Your damage done by your Mind Flay and Mind Blast is increased by 2/4/6/8/10% if your target is afflicted by your Shadow Word: Pain, and increases your spell hit rating by an additional amount equal to 4/8/12/16/20% of your Spirit.

First off, this should be great news for those lost souls who wander aimlessly in the light — their conversion to the dark side is that much easier. Healing gear doesn’t have hit on it? No problem — your shadow tree has you (at least partially) covered.

Another piece of good news: So long as that talent remains in place, those of us who still have spirit in our gear can breathe easy when Cataclysm hits. Ideally, we’ll be going into our first level 85 raid with gear from the new expansion, but we won’t be helpless if we quest and run dungeons in old Wrath gear that’s itemized for healers.

Here’s where things get a bit sketchy, though: Spirit Tap and Improved Spirit Tap still exist in the shadow tree unchanged. This means there are two possible scenarios: (1) Blizzard is setting the hit cap high enough that they don’t expect us to reach it through gear alone, making the concept of a hit rating that fluctuates with time acceptable, or (2) the Spirit Tap talents are in line for a makeover.

Frankly, the second scenario strikes me as the most likely. When the changes for Cataclysm were first announced, I hypothesized that Spirit Tap would be changed to a straight mana regen talent, and I still think that will be preferred by designers over a wildly fluctuating hit rating for shadow priests. Still, you can’t quite rule out a new approach to hit. We’re already used to spellpower, crit and haste fluctuating with time, so perhaps it’s not unreasonable to expect hit rating to fluctuate too.

More about Shadow Orbs and mastery

There’s a little shuffling going on in the talent tree, and Shadow Focus was a casualty, as expected. To make up for its absence, you can get Shadow Weaving sooner (now level 15). I like that change, because it gives Shadow even more of an early boost over the holy tree as far as dealing damage is concerned. (Don’t tell anyone — especially Dawn — but as a low-level, Wrath-era leveling priest, I’d be sorely tempted to grab Searing Light and Divine Fury.)

So, we need to put a new talent in our tree to make up the gap. Here’s what we’re getting:

Empowered Shadow Orbs

Increases the damage done by your shadow orbs by 2/4/6% and you have an h% chance to gain a Shadow Orb when critically hit by any attack.

Alright, that’s not very exciting. We knew we were getting Shadow Orbs. But a quick look at the tooltip hints that we’ve finally got a “first draft” of what these new spheres of doom will do — flat damage. Digging deeper, a datamined tooltip sheds some more light on the darkness, so to speak:

Shadow Orb

The priest is surrounded by Shadow Orbs, stacking up to 0 times. When the priest casts Mind Blast or Mind Spike, all Shadow Orbs are consumed, each increasing the spell damage done.

What does this tell us? While I doubt Blizzard is done playing around with the concept of Shadow Orbs (and further, the zero is obviously a placeholder), they’ve at least settled on an initial mechanism of what looks to be burst-type damage. That’s no surprise — burst damage seems to be a priority in the Cataclysm design of the shadow priest class. Don’t like it? Blame PvPers.

There’s one last tidbit of information about our new mastery mechanic that’s now known — where these orbs come from. The unearthed the shadow priest mastery tooltip reads:

Increases all spell damage done by a percentage.

Increases your spell critical strike chance by a percentage.

Gives a chance for your Shadow Word: Pain and Mind Flay spells to grant you a Shadow Orb each time they deal damage. Also increases the damage bonus to Mind Flay and Mind Spike granted by Shadow Orbs by a percentage.

The important stuff is at the end, of course. In the alpha build, we generate Shadow Orbs through our normal DPS activities — SW:P and Mind Flay. There’s something a little boring about that. It’s not really a neat new mechanic so much as it is something we won’t even notice. Orbs get generated during our normal rotation. Orbs get consumed during our normal rotation. Nothing changes except for a small boost of damage here and there. Maybe we’ll have to duel before raid bosses to build up orbs the way warlocks duel to build up Soul Shards.

A small boost of damage that’s going to be balanced and put on even level with the damage output of all the other hybrid classes. Yawn.

Mind Spike: A terrible threat

Finally, let’s take a look at what mysteries have been uncovered in our new offensive spell, Mind Spike.

Mind Spike

Blasts the target for 992 to 1048 Shadowfrost damage, and causes 31% of the damage up to 2182 to be frozen in the target’s mind for 12 sec. Mind Blast on the target will trigger any frozen damage instantly. The trigger effect causes a high amount of threat.

At first, I had figured that Mind Spike would be unspammable due to a high mana cost, though that’s not necessarily the case — its cost is “only” 17% of your base mana. Instead, we’ll be prevented from spamming Mind Spike via the threat meters. That’s fine in theory, but we’d be prevented from using burst damage on newly spawned adds in instances and raids, which may limit its usefulness. We’ll have to see how this one works on the live servers.

That sick spike in damage when that subsequent Mind Blast hits, unleashing the frozen damage and consuming a shadow orb … that’s going to be awesome. I love big, five-digit numbers.

Overall, the alpha has a definite hit in Shadowy Apparition (so far as I’m concerned) and a miss when it comes to Shadow Orbs. That’s fine — we’re looking at the first draft here, so to speak. Still, I’m getting more and more excited for what’s coming down the road. So bring it on, Two and a Half Men — we could all use that extra hatepower for Cataclysm.

The Cataclysm beta character copy page is available for those select few who have keys. Our understanding is this is a very small group. You’ll know that you have a key and can copy your character over. If not, then you’re not in it, yet. Don’t fall for any scams.

Blizzard has not announced the opt-in procedures or any ways to get into the beta. When they do announce it, you’ll hear it here.

The page is accessible at: https://www.worldofwarcraft.com/beta-charcopy/

UPDATE: Zarhym has confirmed the Cataclysm Friends and Family Alpha begins this week.

Blizzard released information on the 78-82 zone that will be released in Cataclysm. Below is the post from the horse itself.

Once a great Highborne city housing some of the most revered night elves of Kalimdor, Vashj’ir was swallowed by the Great Sea in the Sundering and thought to be lost forever. Queen Azshara, formerly a beloved leader of the Highborne, escaped death in the depths of the sea when the Well of Eternity imploded. Such salvation came at a great cost, as the queen and many of her fellow Highborne were forever transformed into the monstrous naga, doomed to wander the seas for thousands of years. Their existence mostly remains a mystery to the peoples of modern Azeroth, though the Earthen Ring has learned of Azshara’s naga seizing Vashj’ir for an unknown purpose as the cries of the elements echo across Azeroth from the Abyss.

The Sunken City

Vashj’ir is a level 78-82 zone in World of Warcraft: Cataclysm where players will be called to explore the depths of the Great Sea and stop the naga from seizing immeasurable power from the realm of Neptulon the Tidehunter. This expansive underwater zone will feature an unprecedented fight for survival against the naga overwhelming the area, several new quest hubs — including Alliance and Horde naval ships and submarines — all-new underwater travel and combat mechanics, several pocketed undersea caves free from water’s grip, two new five-player dungeons (Throne of the Tides and Abyssal Maw), and the first-ever opportunity to explore the remains of the once-majestic city of Vashj’ir!

Bottled Distress Message Found Adrift at Sea

Need your help. Time is short. I’m held captive in what I hope to be a nightmare.

Enjoying the ocean air just days ago. We were determined to control key trade routes through victory at sea over the Horde. Their fleet came into our scopes. Our world became the deafening sound of battle, the smell of gunpowder, and the feeling of fear. Looking back now, though, that wasn’t real fear.

We weren’t alone in those waters. Our naval warfare attracted attention and rendered us prey. With our vessel already torn apart and taking on water, we saw a tremendous creature rise from the depths and shatter the hull, sucking us down to the sea floor. It all happened so fast. I was quick to tread the waters, hoping to regroup with any survivors I could find through a dense garden of kelp, constantly gasping for a chance breath. That’s when the onslaught began. From all directions swarms of brutal naga swept through and captured a great many of us. Beaten near to death, I awoke in agony, bound in chains.

And here I still sit. I can only describe our prison as very big and somehow very much alive. We’re in the hands of the naga now. Surviving crewmates in better condition than me are driven into slave labor.

One escaped. Thomas. He didn’t make it far before I saw him dragged back. Before being forced into labor, he spoke in a panic about some large shell protecting this living prison, expansive night elf ruins in the distance, strange naga rituals underway, and sea vrykul battling our captors. He made little sense. Could be mad. Or I could be mad to hope vrykul are fighting to free us.

Prison patrols out again. Send word to Stormwind. Sunken city far from extinct. Naga plotting something horrific. Please help.