In fact, many users are suggesting more
WoTLK Gold cooperation between both factions. Although cross-faction support will not initially be a part of cross-faction guilds, or the ability to group with other members of one faction within the open world, the possibilities are something more than a few players are seem open to. If any of those ideas will become a reality remains to be determined, but it's evident that the blurring the boundaries between Horde and Alliance is only getting started, and players look to be ready for whatever happens in the future.
Cross-faction gameplay isn't the sole WoW news this week. In another update that's been well-received by the WoW community, Blizzard is now cracking down on organised "boosting communities" advertising services in games. Activision Blizzard is also currently in the process of being purchased by Microsoft in a deal worth $69 billion making some wonder if WoW will become available for Xbox consoles.
Blizzard Is Cracking Down On WoW Boosting Communities
Citing an "increasing disturbance to the gameplay experience" Blizzard has updated World of Warcraft the end-user's license agreement to stop organizations from using the game to advertise or offer in-game boosts and other services.
Accounts that are found to be associated with
WOW WoTLK Classic Gold a group of people who promote organized boosting particularly those that operate across multiple servers, may be suspended or permanently banned.
Comments